bedrock bubba
Sr. Member
- Jun 27, 2010
- 449
- 406
Our old "friend" Tizzy Martin is back!The Nisenan Indians get 32 acres along Deer Creek in Nevada City and Hospitality House will send their homeless drug addicts to squat there and clean everything up! Hooboy! I doubt anyone has seen a Nisenan native American for many years, but Homeless drug addicts are a plenty in the area and infest the towns of Grass valley/Nevada City by the thousands!
Clean it up? History has shown that they trash up an area then move on and harrass the fine people of the Village constantly.
I am all for the native Americans, and the homeless! They need a place to mine the beer bottles and wine bottles and precious hypodermic needles. Maybe someone can donate a metal detector for them to use.
On November 14, 2018, after a five-year process, 32 acres of land on Deer Creek were allocated to the Native American nonprofit by the Nevada City council with the help of The Sierra Fund. On May 30, The Sierra Fund and Hospitality House are inviting the community to help clean up the area.
The acreage will be connected to the tribute trail, and is off of Champion Mine Road. The Sierra Fund has spent almost five years assessing the property, cleaning up any contaminants leftover from recycling efforts in World War II, said Martin, and working with cultural anthropologists to survey the area.
We all wish Tizzy the best!Lets all chip in and help!
https://www.theunion.com/news/32-ac...enous-tribe-lost-federal-recognition-in-1964/
Clean it up? History has shown that they trash up an area then move on and harrass the fine people of the Village constantly.
I am all for the native Americans, and the homeless! They need a place to mine the beer bottles and wine bottles and precious hypodermic needles. Maybe someone can donate a metal detector for them to use.
On November 14, 2018, after a five-year process, 32 acres of land on Deer Creek were allocated to the Native American nonprofit by the Nevada City council with the help of The Sierra Fund. On May 30, The Sierra Fund and Hospitality House are inviting the community to help clean up the area.
The acreage will be connected to the tribute trail, and is off of Champion Mine Road. The Sierra Fund has spent almost five years assessing the property, cleaning up any contaminants leftover from recycling efforts in World War II, said Martin, and working with cultural anthropologists to survey the area.
We all wish Tizzy the best!Lets all chip in and help!
https://www.theunion.com/news/32-ac...enous-tribe-lost-federal-recognition-in-1964/
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