US forest managers finalize land exchange with Native American tribe in
Arizona
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[October 30, 2024]
CAMP VERDE, Ariz. (AP) — U.S. forest managers have
finalized a land exchange with the Yavapai-Apache Nation that has been
decades in the making and will significantly expand the size of the
tribe's reservation in Arizona's Verde Valley, tribal leaders announced
Tuesday.
As part of the arrangement, six parcels of private land acquired over
the years by the tribe will be traded to the U.S. Forest Service in
exchange for the tribe gaining ownership of 5 square miles (12.95 square
kilometers) of national forest land that is part of the tribe’s
ancestral homelands. The tribe will host a signing ceremony next week to
celebrate the exchange, which was first proposed in 1996.
“This is a critical step in our history and vital to the nation’s
cultural and economic recovery and future prosperity,” Yavapai-Apache
Chairwoman Tanya Lewis said in a post on the tribe's website.
Prescott National Forest Supervisor Sarah Clawson said in a statement
that there had been many delays and changes to the proposal over the
years, but the tribe and the Forest Service never lost sight of
developing an agreement that would benefit both public and tribal lands.
The federal government has made strides over recent years to protect
more lands held sacred by Native American tribes, to develop more
arrangements for incorporating Indigenous knowledge into management of
public lands and to streamline regulations for putting land into trust
for tribes.
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The Yavapai-Apache Nation is made up of two distinct groups of
people — the Wipuhk’a’bah and the Dil’zhe’e. Their homelands spanned
more than 16,000 square miles (41,440 square kilometers) of what is
now central Arizona. After the discovery of gold in the 1860s near
Prescott, the federal government carved out only a fraction to
establish a reservation. The inhabitants eventually were forced from
the land, and it wasn't until the early 1900s that they were able to
resettle a tiny portion of the area.
In the Verde Valley, the Yavapai-Apache Nation's reservation lands
are currently comprised of less than 3 square miles (7.77 square
kilometers) near Camp Verde. The small land base hasn't been enough
to develop economic opportunities or to meet housing needs, Lewis
said, pointing to dozens of families who are on a waiting list for
new homes.
Lewis said that in acknowledgment of the past removal of the
Yavapai-Apache people from their homelands, the preamble to the
tribal constitution recognizes that land acquisition is among the
Yavapai-Apache Nation's responsibilities.
Aside from growing the reservation, the exchange will bolster
efforts by federal land managers to protect the headwaters of the
Verde River and ensure the historic Yavapai Ranch is not sold for
development. The agreement also will improve recreational access to
portions of four national forests in Arizona.
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