The Guardian (USA)

Reverse Trump’s cuts to monument protection­s, Haaland asks Biden

- Katharine Gammon

It was one of Donald Trump’s most provocativ­e environmen­tal decisions. After a year in office, he angered preservati­onists and Native American tribes and ordered that two treasured national monuments be dramatical­ly reduced in size.

The areas falling outside the diminished monuments, both expanses of rocky outcroppin­gsdense with archaeolog­ical artifacts in Utah, lost environmen­tal protection­s. A few years later, he also ordered that commercial fishing be allowed in a marine preserve off the coast of New England.

Now the fate of those monuments appears to be coming full circle. The US interior secretary, Deb Haaland, on Tuesday recommende­d that Joe Biden restore their former size and protection­s, the Washington Post first reported.

Haaland’s decision comes as little surprise. In 2019, Haaland, who is a member of the Laguna Pueblo and the first Indigenous cabinet member, described the wonder of the shrunken Bears Ears national monument in Utah in an interview with the Guardian: “There are some pretty amazing ruins there, and you know, I don’t even like to call them ruins,” she said, “because in our culture, in Pueblo culture, if you acknowledg­e our ancestors, they are there. The spirit of the people never leaves.”

It isn’t yet clear if Biden will follow Haaland’s recommenda­tions, but during his presidenti­al campaign he pledged to restore Utah’s monuments.

Bears Ears is named for a pair of buttes that dominate much of the landscape of south-east Utah, and is the site of ancient cliff dwellings and sacred burial grounds. It is the ancestral homeland of five local native tribes – the Navajo Nation, Hopi Tribe, Ute

Indian Tribe, Ute Mountain Ute Tribe and Pueblo of Zuni. More than 100,000 archeologi­cal sites are protected within the monument.

“President Trump’s actions left the Bears Ears landscape with all of its history, beauty and resources incredibly vulnerable to vandalism and extraction industries,” said Matthew Campbell, a staff attorney with the Native American Rights Fund.

Keala Carter, an advocate and public lands specialist with the Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition, said that “after a four-and-a-half-year delay, we are eager to begin collaborat­ively managing this remarkable yet imperiled landscape. Amidst all of the controvers­y and politics, Bears Ears has been without a comprehens­ive management plan. The buttes have stood silently waiting for a resolution.”

Barack Obama declared Bears Ears a national monument in 2016, setting aside more than 1.3m acres. Grand Staircase-Escalante was establishe­d in 1996 by Bill Clinton, at nearly 1.9m acres.

It later emerged that the Trump administra­tion’s decision on Bears Ears centered on gaining access to oil and gas reserves within the monument. It was subsequent­ly overrun by motorized vehicles and tourists, threatenin­g the archaeolog­ical and cultural artifacts that helped bolster its renown.

Haaland’s move was confirmed by the Utah governor, Spencer Cox, on Monday, who said he was “disappoint­ed” by Haaland’s reported recommenda­tion. There will probably be significan­t opposition from locals who say successive administra­tion have rode roughshod over their wishes with proclamati­ons from distant Washington DC.

 ??  ?? Deb Haaland during a visit to Bear Ears national monument in April. Photograph: Rick Bowmer/AP
Deb Haaland during a visit to Bear Ears national monument in April. Photograph: Rick Bowmer/AP
 ?? Photograph: Bob Strong/Reuters ?? The twin rock formations that form part of Bear Ears national monument in Utah.
Photograph: Bob Strong/Reuters The twin rock formations that form part of Bear Ears national monument in Utah.

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