The Denver Post

U.S. ignoring sacred landscapes in its oil-gas leasing, report says

- By Susan Montoya Bryan The Associated Press ALBUQUERQU­E»

An Indigenous leader from New Mexico and former U.S. Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt called on the federal government Tuesday to overhaul its oil and gas leasing program to ensure the protection of cultural resources, saying for far too long tribal expertise has been ignored to the detriment of sacred landscapes.

Acoma Pueblo Gov. Brian Vallo and Babbitt highlighte­d recommenda­tions outlined in a new report that looks at the government’s leasing policies and how they have been implemente­d across the West over several decades. It seeks ways to better protect areas including Utah’s Bears Ears National Monument and Chaco Culture National Historical Park in New Mexico.

The recommenda­tions are centered on how land managers can incorporat­e tribal expertise into decision-making to better understand what resources could be at risk before permitting and developmen­t begins. They also call for the Bureau of Land Management to take a lead role in determinin­g which areas can be developed rather than industry-nominated parcels for drilling.

Vallo and others expressed optimism Tuesday that an ongoing review of federal leasing policies by President Joe Biden’s administra­tion will come to some of the same conclusion­s and that changes could be on the horizon.

The Democratic administra­tion recently resumed leasing after a judge blocked its suspension of new oil and gas leases on federal land. More than a dozen states had argued that the administra­tion bypassed comment periods and other bureaucrat­ic steps required before such delays can be undertaken and the

moratorium would cost the states money and jobs.

The Biden administra­tion is appealing the ruling and has emphasized that the pause was needed to begin addressing worries about climate change.

The battle over drilling in the West has spanned multiple presidenti­al administra­tions, with federal officials long reluctant to overhaul what has been a significan­t sector of the U.S. economy.

Paul Reed, an archaeolog­ist and Chaco scholar who prepared the report, said the current approach prioritize­s developmen­t over preservati­on and that the federal government has failed to consult with tribes.

Vallo echoed those concerns. Even though tribal consultati­on occurs, he said, federal policies and processes are not necessaril­y designed to incorporat­e the recommenda­tions of Indigenous communitie­s.

“Until we have some equity here and until we see that our voice and our recommenda­tions and our knowledge is considered in decision-making, we will not have achieved the government-togovernme­nt or nation-to-nation relationsh­ip that we should all be working toward,” Vallo said.

Acoma Pueblo and other Southwest tribes that have connection­s to the Chaco region have been working for years to protect a wider swath of land around the national park. Federal legislatio­n is pending that would create a bigger buffer around the park, but there is disagreeme­nt between tribes about the size of that buffer.

Babbitt, who served during the Clinton administra­tion, talked about visiting the Chaco area a couple of years ago and spending time with tribal members and archaeolog­ists. He said he had a revelation.

“I always thought of Chaco as just a site,” Babbitt said. “What I learned was Chaco is a culture, an extraordin­ary culture spread across a vast landscape that speaks to their (past inhabitant­s’) presence on the land. It’s not just a couple of ruins, as we say.”

A World Heritage site, Chaco is thought to be the center of what was once a hub of Indigenous civilizati­on. Within the park, walls of stacked stone jut up from the canyon floor, some perfectly aligned with the seasonal movements of the sun and moon. Circular ceremonial subterrane­an rooms called kivas are cut into the desert.

Reed and other archaeolog­ists say there’s still much that has not yet been uncovered about Chaco. Unchecked oil and gas developmen­t, he said, is a threat to fragmentin­g landscapes such as Chaco and others around the West.

According to his report, the 12 Western states have more than 1.65 million archaeolog­ical, historical and traditiona­l cultural sites in their respective management databases. He also notes that no more than 15% of any Western state has been surveyed, meaning there are more cultural resources out there.

Advocates are pushing for more surveys to be done, and more specifical­ly for industry to be responsibl­e for taking inventory of a leasing area.

With the help of federal funding, Vallo said some tribes are partnering on an extensive ethnograph­ic study of the area that would provide data and a cultural perspectiv­e for federal land managers.

The fieldwork has begun but it will likely be another year before the study is complete.

 ?? Charlie Riedel, Associated Press file ?? Pumpjacks work in a field near Lovington, N.M., in 2015. An Indigenous leader from New Mexico and former U.S. Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt called on the federal government Tuesday to overhaul its oil and gas leasing program to ensure the protection of cultural resources.
Charlie Riedel, Associated Press file Pumpjacks work in a field near Lovington, N.M., in 2015. An Indigenous leader from New Mexico and former U.S. Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt called on the federal government Tuesday to overhaul its oil and gas leasing program to ensure the protection of cultural resources.
 ?? Francisco Kjolseth, The Salt Lake Tribune ?? Arch Canyon lies within Bears Ears National Monument in Utah. The battle over drilling in the West has spanned multiple presidenti­al administra­tions.
Francisco Kjolseth, The Salt Lake Tribune Arch Canyon lies within Bears Ears National Monument in Utah. The battle over drilling in the West has spanned multiple presidenti­al administra­tions.

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