Biden moves to ban oil, gas development outside Native American park
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[November 16, 2021]
By Steve Holland and Andrea Shalal
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe
Biden on Monday announced a step toward prohibiting oil and gas
development outside the boundaries of the Chaco Culture National
Historical Park as part of a Native American tribal summit he is
hosting.
Biden also signed what he called a "long overdue" executive order aimed
at improving public safety and justice for Native Americans, flanked by
U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland, Interior Secretary Deb Haaland
and other Cabinet members. Representatives from 570 tribes are expected
to participate in the event, which is being held virtually because of
the pandemic.
The Democratic president, newly returned from the COP26 UN climate
conference, said he and more than 50 Native Americans serving in senior
roles in his administration would "take action to protect the greater
Chaco landscape from future oil and gas" leasing as part of a broader
push to protect tribal lands.
"We have to continue to stand up for the dignity and sovereignty of
tribal nations," he said.
Biden added that the $1 trillion infrastructure bill he plans to sign
later on Monday includes a record $13 billion for tribal infrastructure
that he said had been chronically underfunded for generations.A separate
$1.75 trillion social spending bill still working its way through
Congress would provide further help for tribal communities, including
record funding to combat climate change, Biden said. He told reporters
after the event he remained confident the measure would eventually pass.
PROTECTING TRIBAL LANDS, LIVES
Tribes have long called on U.S. officials to ban drilling in the area, a
center of ancestral Pueblo culture in the Southwestern United States.
The White House said the Department of the Interior will "initiate
consideration of a 20-year withdrawal of federal lands within a 10-mile
(16-km) radius around Chaco Culture National Historical Park, protecting
the area from new federal oil and gas leasing and development."
The proposed action would not apply to individual Native American
allotments or to minerals within the area, it said.
“Chaco Canyon is a sacred place that holds deep meaning for the
Indigenous peoples whose ancestors lived, worked, and thrived in that
high desert community,” Haaland, the first Native American Cabinet
secretary, said in a statement, adding that it was time to consider
"more enduring protections."
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President Joe Biden, with first lady Jill Biden, Homeland Security
Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, Secretary of Health and Human Services
(HHS) Xavier Becerra, Attorney General Merrick Garland and Interior
Secretary Deb Haaland, signs an executive order meant to improve
public safety and other issues on tribal lands during the Tribal
Nations Summit at an auditorium on the White House campus in
Washington, D.C., U.S. November 15, 2021. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Members of New Mexico's congressional delegation have
urged Haaland to ban oil and gas development outside the boundaries
of the high-desert par in northwest New Mexico, which is listed as a
World Heritage Site by UNESCO, the U.N. cultural agency.
The executive order on safety directs the Departments of Justice,
Interior, Homeland Security, and Health and Human Services to
"create a strategy to improve public safety and justice for Native
Americans and to address the epidemic of missing or murdered
Indigenous peoples," the White House said.
Homicide is the third-leading cause of death among Native women who
are murdered at rates more than 10 times the national average,
according to federal data.
Investigations into violence against Native peoples have been
underfunded for decades, with murders and missing persons cases
often unsolved and unaddressed, Haaland said. The Bureau of Indian
Affairs, which runs law enforcement on Indian lands, is part of the
U.S. Department of the Interior.
Biden's wife Jill Biden, an educator, said after hearing from
children and youth speaking in their Indigenous languages that
urgent action was needed to preserve tribal languages given the
dwindling number of Native speakers.
"The ability to speak our own truth, in our own words, is power,"
she said, announcing a memorandum of agreement that will provide
federal aid to teach and preserve Indigenous languages.
Vice President Kamala Harris will make remarks on Tuesday. The
tribal summit is the first of its kind since 2016. There were none
during the presidency of Republican Donald Trump.
(Reporting by Steve Holland and Andrea Shalal; Editing by Peter
Cooney, Angus MacSwan and Grant McCool)
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