Before Interstate 10 was built, the Tohono Oโodham Nation was relatively removed from the rest of southern Arizona.
But in the 1960s, construction on the cross-country highway skirted the edge of the reservation. According to one of the tribeโs elected leaders, it didnโt just bring noise and air pollution, it encouraged development around the once-quiet community.
Austin Nuรฑez has been chairman for the Tohono Oโodham Nationโs San Xavier District since 1987, or as he says, โa few years.โ
Nuรฑez said when he was a child, downtown Tucson seemed far off in the distance, but thatโs no longer the case.
โI mean, itโs right there, weโre just adjacent to the city of Tucson boundaries,โ said Nuรฑez, whose district includes the historic San Xavier del Bac Mission.
As neighborhoods around the reservation expanded, there were more and more trespassers. One I-10 exit within the reservation led to nowhere.
โPeople would get off there and trespass on the desert and theyโd sometimes take cactus or wood and weโd have to let them know that that was not allowed,โ Nuรฑez said.
Eventually, Tohono Oโodham leaders worked with the Arizona Department of Transportation to close the exit so travelers would be unable to access the reservation from the interstate.
Now, members of the Tohono Oโodham feel threatened by another federal highway, this one a north-south interstate that would be built adjacent to their community.
For the past decade, the Federal Highway Administration has been working on a plan to extend Interstate 11, which runs for 22 miles in Nevada and concurrently with U.S. Route 93 between Henderson, Nevada, and the Arizona state line. A proposed 280-mile extension from Wickenburg to Nogales would skirt the Tohono Oโodham community.
Nuรฑez said the original plan called for I-11 to cut through a corner of the reservation.
โWe told them โno,โ we didnโt agree with that,โ he said. โThey should keep that corridor as far away from us as possible.โ
Even though the proposed path doesnโt go directly through Tohono Oโodham land, Nuรฑez said itโs still a problem.
โWeโre being intruded on,โ he said. โThere should be other alternatives that could be looked at that wouldnโt (include) constructionโ so close to tribal lands.
In addition to nearby I-10, a major electrical transmission corridor and natural gas line run through the Tohono Oโodham Nation.
โThe community just said, โWe donโt need any more,โ โ said Nuรฑez, reflecting on the proposed I-11. โAnything we can do to prevent (another highway) would be the best thing for all of us.โ
But some see economic benefits to expanding the north-south highway that could eventually stretch from Canada to Mexico.
Christian Price is the former mayor of Maricopa and chairman of the I-11 Coalition, a nonprofit advocacy group in favor of the highway.
โPhoenix and Las Vegas are really the only destinations in America with โฆ over a million people that have no direct connecting freeway,โ he said. โThis would help move people. It would help goods and services be transported โฆ and it is critical to a growing state like Arizona.โ
Price said environmental impact studies have been completed to ensure the highway will take the best route.
But the proposed corridor would be built through Saguaro National Park, the Tucson Mountains and Ironwood Forest National Monument, which has drawn the attention of conservation groups.
In April 2022, the Coalition for Sonoran Desert Protection, Center for Biological Diversity, Friends of Ironwood Forest and Tucson Audubon Society filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Tucson over the proposal.
In the lawsuit, the groups allege that the Federal Highway Administration failed to comply with the National Environmental Policy Act, Section 4(f) of the U.S. Department of Transportation Act and the Fish and Wildlife Coordination Act of 1958.
They said the FHWA did not do its due diligence in assessing the environmental impact of the proposed highway.
Ironwood Forest National Monument has the densest stand of ironwood trees in the world, according to Tom Hannagan, board president for the nonprofit organization Friends of Ironwood Forest. He said itโs also home to the only indigenous herd of desert bighorn sheep in southern Arizona.
โWeโd like to keep that herd as healthy as possible,โ he said.
Along with desert bighorn sheep, there are desert tortoises, pygmy owls, lesser long-nosed bats and cactus wrens living within the monument.
Hannagan said the FHWA did not include Ironwood Forest National Monument in its environmental impact statement.
โThey did not consider it as a recreational area, which it is,โ he said. โThey didnโt consider it as a wildlife refuge, which it is.โ
Ironwood Forest National Monument also has as many as 3,000 archaeological and historical sites, according to Hannaganโs group.
After years of attending stakeholder meetings and submitting numerous complaints against the highway, Friends of Ironwood Forest saw only one option.
โWe felt like the only thing we can do now is ask a court to intercede,โ Hannagan said.
David Robinson, director of conservation advocacy and interim executive director at the Tucson Audubon Society, said thereโs no way of knowing how many species would be impacted by I-11.
โWeโre talking about destroying a huge swath, and then having the ripple effects out beyond them,โ he said. โItโs all so interconnected. But it really would impact an entire desert ecosystem.โ
Robinson cited the desert tortoise as one animal that could be harmed.
โThereโs no way itโs crossing a freeway,โ he said. โThis sort of freeway would be an impenetrable barrier to land-based animals.โ
He called the entire proposal misguided.
โWherever they build, it is going to be damaging in terms of environment, in terms of human health, in terms of climate. This particular lawsuit is objecting to one of the two proposed routes that would go through really sensitive, really valuable desert habitat. Weโre absolutely opposed to that,โ he said. โThe alternative route that would come closer to the city would have really bad impacts on human health. So weโre not in favor of that either.โ
As for the development that the highway would inevitably encourage, Robinson worries how the desert could handle it.
โWe canโt afford that development just in terms of water,โ he said. โWe donโt have enough water for things currently.โ
The I-11 Coalitionโs Price disagreed.
When asked if he thinks there is enough water to support new development in the area along the proposed corridor, Price said, โOh, very much so. Arizona is about water in different areas. And one of the things that Arizona has done for a long time, is itโs planned for its water shortages.โ
Part of I-11 would pass through the Lower Hassayampa Sub-basin, a groundwater aquifer in the far West Valley.
Ryan Mitchell, chief hydrologist and assistant director of the Arizona Department of Water Resources, said itโs not a simple yes or no to whether thereโs enough water in the area to support new development.
The department issues certificates of assured water supply if thereโs enough water for 100 years to support development. But not everyone with a certificate has started building.
โWhen we do our model, we canโt just look at whoโs there pumping now, we have to also include any and all of those certificates that have been issued,โ Mitchell said. โAnd as of right now, the results of our model when we project forward 100 years, is that there is unmet demand for those future planned communities โฆ that are already over-allocated in the aquifer.โ
That means thereโs not enough water for more certificates to be distributed. But there are some undeveloped certificates for land near the proposed I-11 corridor.
โThey could sell the property with the water rights and the analyses,โ Mitchell said. โThereโs a lot of stuff that people can do between now and whenever the highway is there and whenever it gets built.โ
Robinson of the Audubon Society said thereโs a better solution than constructing another highway.
โIn terms of climate, this is about as backward thinking as you could get,โ he said. โThis is like a mid-20th century solution to traffic congestion, when we need a 21st century one. Rail is an obvious answer and that was dismissed as an alternative.โ
Although he supports multimodal transportation, Price said thereโs one crucial reason that it wonโt work: money.
โRail is very, very expensive, and so itโs actually cheaper and more effective to do a roadway,โ he said.
On Jan. 26, U.S. District Judge John C. Hinderaker heard arguments in Tucson on a motion by the federal government to dismiss the conservation groupsโ challenge to I-11.
Wendy Park is an attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity.
โThe issue was whether certain claims challenging the highway administrationโs failure to analyze the impacts on public parks and wildlife refuges should go forward, or should wait to be heard until after ADOT decides the highwayโs specific alignment,โ Park said in an email. โThe highway administration failed to do that analysis over the objections of BLM (U.S. Bureau of Land Management), National Park Service and other agencies.โ
According to Park, it could take anywhere from a few weeks to a few months for the judge to rule on the case.
If the highway administration is allowed to move forward, the Tohono Oโodhamโs Nuรฑez said his tribe may reach out to congressional leaders for assistance in stopping the project.
โItโs just undeveloped and looks beautiful,โ he said. โWe would like to keep it that way as much as possible.โ