Judge blocks sale and closure of National Archives in Seattle; notes 'public relations disaster' by feds
Feb. 12—U.S. District Court Judge
He pointedly asked
That's the little-known entity few have heard of and which recommended the Archives be shuttered in
Kipnis said he didn't know.
Coughenour said the feds could have avoided a "public relations disaster" if they had "displayed some sensitivity" to how the closure affected the Northwest.
Coughenour also asked Kipnis what he knew about this quote in a Thursday Seattle Times story from a spokesperson for the
Kipnis answered, "I can tell you there is truth to that statement."
He also said that "in a week or so" he expected to learn the Biden administration's position on the archives here.
Coughenour said he'd issue a written decision next week.
Having declared the 10-acre site on
Set to be moved are the histories of 272 federally recognized tribes in
The archives in
Ferguson said about Coughenour's decision, "I hope these agencies have gotten the memo that their conduct isn't acceptable and is illegal."
Going forward, he said, "Unless the federal government formally reverses course, at some point we'll be asking for a final decision on the merits of the case."
The
But on
The board announced that "given the impact of COVID" and "the commercial real estate market," the properties would be bundled and sold in one single portfolio by a broker.
On
When asked if now, given the court ruling, the
"At the risk of saying the obvious, this was done by the prior administration, and many of the prior administration's decisions are coming under scrutiny," he said.
Kipnis' brief included a declaration from a National Archives engineer, who said that bringing the Sand Point facility up to standard would cost
Such funding, he said, "is simply not available in the foreseeable future."
Said Miller, "Rarely has there been a federal building that didn't have maintenance issues."
For a homeowner, he said, such a dollar figure is massive.
But, he said, "These are not numbers that should frighten anyone. For military bases, federal buildings, this is standard fare."
She remembered the Obama administration years, when each year the president invited representatives from the 547 federally recognized tribes to meet with him in
"We had very good discussion. They listened, and that always helps," she said.
Did the Trump administration issue a similar invitation to the tribes?
"Not that I know of," said Nelson.
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