It's been 79 days since President Biden pledged to designate Nevada's Avi Kwa Ame, or Spirit Mountain, as a national monument—but he still hasn't fulfilled his promise. Now the Center for American Progress is highlighting the importance of Avi Kwa Ame for meeting the president's environmental justice commitments.
A new report from CAP identifies the "nature gap" that exists around Avi Kwa Ame—an area where "93 percent of people of color are nature deprived, making them nearly twice as likely to be nature deprived than white communities living in the same area," according to Sam Zeno, the author of the analysis.
The CAP report found that in the 25 mile radius around Avi Kwa Ame, which includes the Las Vegas metropolitan area, communities of color "experience heightened nature deprivation, even while surrounded by other public lands in the region."
Last fall at the White House Tribal Nations Summit, President Biden pledged to protect the 450,000-acre national monument using his authority under the Antiquities Act, saying it was a "sacred place that is central to the creation story of so many tribes that are here today."
Once President Biden signs the proclamation designating Avi Kwa Ame, it will become one of the few national monuments to honor Indigenous history. The area around Spirit Mountain also has incredible ecological importance, with the world's largest Joshua tree forest, endangered desert bighorn sheep, and desert tortoise populations.
Learn more at honorspiritmountain.org and watch CWP's Road to 30 video postcard from Avi Kwa Ame.
Got Colorado River questions? Brad Udall explains it all
In the latest episode of CWP's podcast, The Landscape, Kate and Aaron are joined by water scientist Brad Udall to talk about the current state of the Colorado River. Water levels are dropping and something has to give or the river's main reservoirs—Lake Powell and Lake Mead—are going to run dry. But states aren’t anywhere close to an agreement on how they're going to cut back.
Udall, who teaches at Colorado State University and researches the impact of climate change on the Colorado River, is here to explain what’s going on, how dire the situation is, and what could happen next. Listen now or subscribe on Apple Podcasts.
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