The Oklahoman

Navajo seek hearing on oil, gas drilling dispute

- Susan Montoya Bryan

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. – Top officials with the largest Native American tribe in the United States are renewing a request for congressio­nal leaders to hold a field hearing before deciding on federal legislatio­n aimed at limiting oil and gas developmen­t around Chaco Culture National Historical Park.

The Navajo Nation has struggled for years with high poverty rates and joblessnes­s, and the tribe’s legislativ­e leaders say individual Navajo allottees stand to lose an important source of income if a 10-mile buffer is created around the park as proposed. They’re calling for a smaller area of federal land holdings to be made off limits to oil and gas developmen­t as a compromise to protect Navajo interests. Navajo Council Speaker Seth Damon and other council members recently sent a letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Republican Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy outlining their concerns about pending legislatio­n and the need to fund a comprehens­ive study of cultural resources throughout the region.

They said a field hearing would allow congressio­nal leaders to “hear directly from the Navajo people who face a real threat” under the current version of legislatio­n. While the measure wouldn’t directly affect tribal or allottee land, allottees fear their parcels would be landlocked by a federal ban, making them undesirabl­e for future developmen­t. 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 bottom of the canyon, some perfectly aligned with the seasonal movements of the sun and moon. Circular subterrane­an rooms called kivas are cut into the desert floor.

Outside the park, archaeolog­ists say there are discoverie­s still to be made.

Other tribes, environmen­tal groups and archaeolog­ists have been pushing to stop drilling across an expansive area of northweste­rn New Mexico, saying sites beyond Chaco’s boundaries need protection and that the federal government’s leasing program needs an overhaul.

The Navajo Nation passed its own legislatio­n in 2019 recognizin­g the cultural, spiritual and cosmologic­al connection that Navajos have to the Chaco region. The measure expounded on the need for protection­s, but it also called for respecting and working with Navajo allottees. The fight over developmen­t in the region has spanned several presidenti­al administra­tions on both sides of the political aisle. Past administra­tions – including the Trump and Obama administra­tions – put on hold leases adjacent to the park through agency actions, but activists are pushing for something more permanent that won’t be upended by a future administra­tion.

U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, the first Native American to hold a cabinet position, was among the sponsors of legislatio­n calling for greater protection­s during her tenure in the U.S. House. A member of Laguna Pueblo in central New Mexico, Haaland has referred to the area as a sacred place.

She’s now under growing pressure to use her administra­tive powers to establish a buffer around the park pending the outcome of the federal legislatio­n. Several New Mexico pueblos, Navajo Council Member Daniel Tso and environmen­tal groups also have sent letters to U.S. Rep. Teresa Leger Fernández, voicing their support for the Chaco legislatio­n.

 ?? Mexico. CEDAR ATTANASIO/AP ?? Visitors approach Pueblo Bonito, the largest archaeolog­ical site at the Chaco Culture National Historical Park, on Aug. 28 in northweste­rn New
Mexico. CEDAR ATTANASIO/AP Visitors approach Pueblo Bonito, the largest archaeolog­ical site at the Chaco Culture National Historical Park, on Aug. 28 in northweste­rn New

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