From Center for Western Priorities <[email protected]>
Subject Look West: Tribal leaders push for Chaco protections
Date April 28, 2022 2:04 PM
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Look West: Public lands and energy news from the Center for Western Priorities


** Tribal leaders push for Chaco protections
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Thursday, April 28, 2022
Chaco Culture National Historical Park is an International Dark Sky Park. Photo: @ChacoCultureNHP ([link removed])

The Biden administration is hosting a series of meetings ([link removed]) this week with Native American leaders about a proposal to prohibit new oil and gas development in northwest New Mexico near Chaco Culture National Historical Park, a World Heritage site that is thought to be the center of what was once a hub of Indigenous civilization.

The meetings are part of the Interior Department's public outreach activities as it considers withdrawing 550 square miles near the park from mineral development for 20 years. During a virtual briefing, top officials with the All Pueblo Council of Governors said they would reiterate their support ([link removed]) for the proposal during the tribal consultation process.

Randall Vicente, the governor of Acoma Pueblo, said ([link removed]) tribes are ready to band together to ensure more permanent protections are adopted for lands outside park boundaries that contain the remnants of stone dwellings, ceremonial kivas, pottery sherds, petroglyphs, shrines, and other cultural resources. "Together, this area is one irreplaceable, sacred, interconnected landscape unlike any other. We remain tied to those resources, not only because they represent the footprints and fingerprints of our ancestors, we rely on them on this day as Acoma people," Vicente said ([link removed]) .

The Bureau of Land Management is accepting public comments on the withdrawal proposal until May 6.


** 30x30 opponents misunderstand NEPA
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Opponents of the Biden administration's America the Beautiful plan are advocating for a new tactic ([link removed]) of using the nation's bedrock environmental law, the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) to delay progress toward reaching the 30x30 goal. At the Stop 30x30 Summit in Lincoln, Nebraska last week, Margaret Byfield with the American Stewards of Liberty said ([link removed]) , “What we are calling for is that President Biden needs to instruct agencies to implement immediately a programmatic environmental impact statement on 30×30.” But there's a catch: NEPA doesn't apply to broad aspirational goals like 30x30, ([link removed]) it applies to assessing the environmental impacts of specific projects. Not only that, a Council on
Environmental Quality publication ([link removed]) released in the waning days of the Trump administration, “A Citizens Guide to NEPA," states “NEPA does not apply to the President. ([link removed]) ”
Quick hits


** Tribal leaders push for Chaco protections
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Associated Press ([link removed]) | Albuquerque Journal ([link removed])


** How checkerboard placement of private lands makes public areas in the West inaccessible
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KJZZ ([link removed])


** Native American hires reflect changing Interior leadership
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E&E News ([link removed])


** Colorado's largest coal-fired power plant could close 4 years earlier than proposed
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Colorado Public Radio ([link removed])


** Interior targets areas off Oregon coast, Mid-Atlantic states for offshore wind development
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E&E News ([link removed]) | Oregon Public Broadcasting ([link removed])


** Yellowstone to Yukon corridor shows value of conserving large landscapes, not just isolated parks and preserves
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The Conversation ([link removed])


** Rocky Mountain National Park raising its entry fees
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KDVR ([link removed]) | Colorado Public Radio ([link removed]) | Loveland Reporter Herald ([link removed])


** More plans for Dark Sky places on Colorado's western slope
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Telluride Daily Planet ([link removed])
Quote of the day
” With land valuations being what they are, it's getting more and more difficult for working farms and ranches to remain profitable. Private land conservation is seeing a boom because people are really concerned about land conversion from working lands into development.”
—David Weinstein ([link removed]) , western conservation finance director for the Trust for Public Land
Picture this


** @BLMUtah ([link removed])
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It's International #DarkSkyWeek ([link removed]) , and Utah has the highest concentration of International Dark Sky Association-certified locations. Get stellar views of the night sky, and check out the list of #DarkSky ([link removed]) viewing locations from our partners at @VisitUtah ([link removed]) : [link removed] ([link removed])

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