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HomeNational NewsWashington, Oregon sign on to joint lawsuit to stop sale of Seattle...

Washington, Oregon sign on to joint lawsuit to stop sale of Seattle National Archives building

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The Seattle National Archives’ 56,000 cubic feet houses thousands of paper files related to tribal treaty documents, ancestral records, and the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, according to court documents.

(The Center Square) — Washington, Oregon, and 29 indigenous tribes are suing the federal government for selling what community organizations call a “treasure trove” of Pacific Northwest history. 

Seattle’s National Archives building was listed as a “High Value Asset” in 2019 along with a dozen other federal properties slated for sale by the Public Buildings Reform Board (PBRB).

Virtually all of the aging records have yet to be digitized, court documents state, and fewer than .001% are available online. 

Sixteen Democratic and Republican members of Congress from Oregon, Idaho, Washington, and Alaska voiced opposition to the sale in a joint letter back in January 2020.

The records will be sent to two separate National Archives sites in Kansas City, Missouri and Riverside, California. 

Ferguson claims his public records requests concerning the building’s proposed sale around that time were left unfulfilled and spurred a $65,000 fee for record redactions from the PBRB. 

In a letter to the federal government sent on February 25, 2020, Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson urged the federal government to rethink moving the sensitive and irreplaceable records.

“To be blunt, these federal agencies don’t give a damn about their legal obligations or what these documents mean to our region,” Ferguson said. “Consequently, this lawsuit is our only recourse to compel the government to follow the law and respect the fact that these irreplaceable records contain the DNA of our region.”

He says the PBRB has informed his office the requested records will take until March 31, 2021 to produce.

Those lawsuits yielded a handful of related documents from four federal agencies which produced heavily redacted records, according to court documents.

In response to the agencies’ refusal to comply with Ferguson’s records request, he filed four Freedom of Information Act lawsuits by September 2020.

On Monday, Washington filed a joint lawsuit against federal authorities in U.S. District Court, claiming the National Archives building’s expedited sale is illegal based on its relation to “agriculture, recreational, and conservation programs.”

By October 2020, the PBRB announced in a 74-page meeting record that it would advance the sale of Seattle’s National Archives Building and 11 other federal sites due to the economic downturn of the national real estate market.

The lawsuit names nine community organizations as plaintiffs who say the sale of the building would place priceless Pacific Northwest history at risk.

It also claims the sale violated various administrative protocol and did not seek testimony from tribal governments and other stakeholders. 

Among the files stored at the building are some 50,000 documents related to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 which forced Chinese immigrants to go through a discriminatory application process meant to curb Chinese migration.

“The word ‘archives,’ from the view of law firms, businesses and courts, tends to conjure an image of a records storage facility for ‘dead files,’” said Tallis King George, a Puyallup tribal attorney. “A visit to the National Archives at Seattle, for native people whose ancestral historical and cultural records are housed there, fills a deep cultural yearning to know, honor and understand the lives and sacrifices of their ancestors.”

The sale of the National Archives Building is in the middle of the bidding process which plaintiffs are seeking to block in court as the lawsuit awaits review.

“The Archives are critical partners in the conservation of our community’s history,” said Connie So, president of OCA Asian Pacific Advocates – Greater Seattle Chapter. “Most Chinese Americans left few records of their lives and history prior to 1950, making the Archive’s treasure trove of files related to the Chinese Exclusion Act all the more precious.”

By Tim Gruver | The Center Square
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Reposted with permission

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