Las Vegas Review-Journal

Zinke’s visit leaves many unhappy

Stakeholde­rs fume over being cut out of shortened agenda

- By Keith Rogers Las Vegas Review-journal

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, who said Sunday he would like his federal agency to be known as the “happy department,” left some unhappy campers in the wake of his shortened trip to Nevada to review its two newest national monuments.

Among those chafed by the last-minute cancellati­on of promised meetings with local stakeholde­rs were local Paiute tribes and Rep. Dina Titus, D-nev.

“We have written, we have called (for him) to … meet with the opponents, meet with the tribes, meet with elected officials to hear the whole story,” she said Monday at a news conference in Las Vegas. “Well, that changed at the last minute. He couldn’t stay because he had some kind of Cabinet meeting with whoever is chief of staff this week … which is ridiculous. He could have come a day earlier.”

Two-day visit cut to one

Zinke arrived Sunday morning for what was to have been a two-day visit to tour the Gold Butte and Basin and Range monuments, part of his review of 22 national monuments

and five marine national monuments created by presidenti­al decree since Jan. 1, 1996, to determine whether the designatio­ns should be scaled back or eliminated.

He did get a rapid-fire aerial tour of both monuments, which included jaunts on the ground to see some of their wonders. But his staff canceled meetings with local Paiute tribes, Titus and other opponents of changing the monuments’ boundaries, saying he had been summoned to Washington for a Cabinet meeting Monday with President Donald Trump’s new chief of staff, John Kelly.

Zinke met with local officials during a helicopter stop at Whitney

ZINKE

Pocket in Gold Butte and also with a few stakeholde­rs, including some representa­tive of the Friends of

Gold Butte conservati­on group and officials involved in artist Michael Heiser’s “City” project in Lincoln County.

During a brief news conference in Bunkervill­e at the end of the day, Zinke said he had made no decisions yet on the Nevada monuments. But, as he stood in front of the Gold Butte backdrop, he told reporters that one of his goals is to make cultural changes in the agencies under his control.

“We should be the happy department. When you see a BLM truck, you should think ‘land manager’ and not ‘law enforcemen­t,’” he said in an indirect reference to the 2014 armed standoff between Bureau of Land Management agents and rancher Cliven Bundy and his supporters.

He’ll have to work to put Darren Daboda, chairman of the Moapa Band of Paiutes, into that frame of mind.

Daboda said at Monday’s news conference that the snub by Zinke was the second time he had bailed on a promised meeting, having also skipped one while visiting Pahrump in June.

‘Empty promises’

“(It) felt like empty promises from the government … for him to dismiss us as Native Americans, not just my tribe but the Las Vegas tribe. We sort of felt like we’re treated like second-class citizens,” Daboda said, adding that the federal government has a responsibi­lity “to respond to our concerns” about the monument review.

One of his tribe’s issues is to ensure protection of areas where traditiona­l pine nut harvests take place. “It’s in our DNA,” he said.

Daboda said that Zinke spoke with him for about 45 minutes by phone on Monday afternoon and that the Interior secretary apologized for having to truncate his trip. He also promised to return to Nevada at an unspecifie­d future date to meet with tribe members.

Patrick Naranjo, UNLV resources coordinato­r and a member of the Santa Clara Pueblo tribe of New Mexico, was one of the few stakeholde­rs who met with Zinke, during his helicopter tour stop at the Mount Irish petroglyph site in Basin and Range.

“He did give general options that weren’t very helpful for protecting the petroglyph sites. That struck each one of us who were in the meeting as odd,” Naranjo said.

“I do feel like he embraces the identity issue of these locations, what they mean,” he said. “But what I don’t think the secretary understood was how these elevate the institutio­nal profile (of tribes) in Southern Nevada. They reflect the current demography of the people who are here, their current government status, their history of marginaliz­ation, their uniqueness living in this land before Western establishm­ent.

“This is North American history in Nevada with the Indian people that are still here.”

At Sunday’s 20-minute talk with reporters in Bunkervill­e, Zinke said part of his review will be examining the “fairly loose” definition of monuments created through the Antiquitie­s Act of 1906 and how it applies to large monuments like Gold Butte and Basin and Range, which combined encompass more than 1 million acres.

“If you have a monument on top of a wilderness study area, a monument is managed through proclamati­on and a wilderness study area is managed by the Wilderness Act until Congress takes action,” he said, noting that wilderness study areas have more stringent requiremen­ts.

That raises a question, Zinke said: “Do you manage it by a monument, or do you manage it by the wilderness study area? That’s something I’ve asked Congress to clarify.”

Contact Keith Rogers at krogers@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0308. Find him on Twitter: @Keithroger­s2

 ?? Elizabeth Brumley ?? Las Vegas Review-journal Rep. Dina Titus, D-nev., discusses Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke’s visit to Nevada during a news conference Monday at a Battle Born Progress office in Las Vegas.
Elizabeth Brumley Las Vegas Review-journal Rep. Dina Titus, D-nev., discusses Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke’s visit to Nevada during a news conference Monday at a Battle Born Progress office in Las Vegas.

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