When President Barack Obama designated the 330,000-acre Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument in 2015, he protected a landscape rich with ecological diversity and recreational opportunities in northern California. But nearly 14,000 acres of public lands just to the east of the monument remain in need of greater protection.
The Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation is asking President Joe Biden to expand Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument to include the 13,753 acres of ridgeline known to the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation as Molok Luyuk (pronounced Ma-lok Lou-yoke). Molok Luyuk means “condor ridge” in the Patwin language, an homage to the birds that once flew there.
“Our hope is also to see the return to an Indigenous name for these lands,” Tribal Chairman Anthony Roberts wrote in March.
Learn more about the effort to protect Molok Luyuk in the Center for Western Priorities' latest postcard in our Road to 30 series, highlighting the opportunities and ways President Biden can put America on track to reach his goal of protecting 30 percent of America's lands and waters by the end of the decade.
Feds greenlight nuclear waste dump in New Mexico
Federal officials on Wednesday approved a multi-billion dollar facility to "temporarily" store spent nuclear fuel at a facility near Carlsbad, New Mexico. The highly radioactive material would be transported to New Mexico by rail.
New Mexico officials, including Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham, have vowed to stop the project, fearing New Mexico will become America's dumping ground for spent fuel, since the nation has no permanent waste site. New Jersey-based Holtec International has argued federal law pre-empts the state legislature's attempts to block the facility.
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