Albuquerque Journal

House passes Chaco Canyon protection­s bill

Law backed by the pueblos and Navajo leadership

- BY SCOTT TURNER JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

The U.S. House passed legislatio­n Wednesday that would prevent the use of federal land for oil and gas developmen­t within a 10-mile radius of Chaco Canyon National Historical Park.

“We’re very proud of this piece of legislatio­n,” U.S. Rep. Ben Ray Luján, D-N.M., told the Journal. “It has the support of the governor (Michelle Lujan Grisham), the pueblos, the Navajo leadership and advocates of the environmen­t.”

U.S. Reps. Deb Haaland and Xochitl Torres Small, both Democrats, also supported the bill, known as the Chaco Culture Heritage Protection Act. It passed 245-174 and now moves on to the Senate.

“This piece of legislatio­n removes more than 316,000 acres from oil and natural gas developmen­t, and the use of coal minerals,” Luján said, a move he believes will protect the more than 5,000 artifacts estimated to be within the greater Chaco region.

He said the bill protects the heritage and culture of both the Navajo and Pueblo people.

“This is a sacred site to many people who still live in the area,” the congressma­n said.

Haaland called Chaco Canyon “hallowed ground” in a post on Twitter. She said it “must be valued the same way we value other sacred places.”

Haaland said Chaco had been “time and time again, exploited by big oil companies.”

The bill does not affect land within the buffer that is privately owned, owned by the state or under tribal control.

“The passage of the Chaco Cultural Heritage Area Protection Act is the result of years of hard work and collaborat­ion between New Mexico’s congressio­nal delegation, tribal leadership and other stakeholde­rs,” Torres Small said. “The joint effort ensures Chaco Canyon and its sacred lands are protected for generation­s to come.”

The bill contains protection­s for tribal and allotted land, specifical­ly excluding trust and allotted land from withdrawal, stating nothing in the bill “affects the mineral rights of an Indian Tribe or member of an Indian Tribe to trust land or allotment land” and preserving tribes’ and allottees’ rights to build the infrastruc­ture they need elsewhere in the withdrawal area in order to develop on their land.

State Land Commission­er Stephanie Garcia Richard earlier this year placed a moratorium on new oil and gas leasing on state trust lands within the greater Chaco region.

New Mexico Oil and Gas Associatio­n communicat­ion director Robert McEntyre told the Journal earlier this year that a few legacy oil and gas wells are in operation within the proposed buffer zone. He said the industry supports the protection of archeologi­cal and cultural sites, but questioned what the 10-mile buffer would accomplish. He said there is a process through the National Environmen­tal Policy Act that the industry must go through before it can drill, and that the industry is forbidden from drilling in an area where artifacts are found.

U.S. Interior Secretary David Bernhardt put on hold for a year new oil and gas leasing on federal lands in the Chaco area earlier this year after touring the park with U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M.

In June, the House passed the Interior appropriat­ions package that included a one-year moratorium on oil and gas drilling near Chaco. Similar protection­s are included in an Interior spending bill that is waiting for a vote in the Senate.

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