Biden will announce the creation of two new national monuments to
protect tribal lands in California
Send a link to a friend
[January 07, 2025]
By COLLEEN LONG and MATTHEW DALY
LOS ANGELES (AP) — President Joe Biden is establishing two new national
monuments in California that will honor Native American tribes, the
White House confirmed Tuesday, as Biden seeks to conserve at least 30%
of U.S. lands and waters by 2030 through his “America the Beautiful”
initiative.
Proclamations set to be signed Tuesday will create the Chuckwalla
National Monument in Southern California near Joshua Tree National Park
and the Sáttítla National Monument in Northern California. The
declarations bar drilling and mining and other development on the
624,000-acre (2,400-square-kilometer) Chuckwalla site and roughly
225,000 acres (800 square kilometers) near the Oregon border in Northern
California.
The new monuments will protect clean water for communities, honor areas
of cultural significance to tribal nations and Indigenous peoples, and
enhance access to nature, the White House said.
Biden, who has two weeks left in office, is set to visit Los Angeles and
the Eastern Coachella Valley on Tuesday after meeting Monday with the
families of the victims in the New Year’s attack in New Orleans.
Biden announced Monday he will ban new offshore oil and gas drilling in
most U.S. coastal waters, including in California and other West Coast
states. The plan is intended to block possible efforts by the incoming
Trump administration to expand offshore drilling.
The flurry of activity has been in line with the Democratic president’s
“America the Beautiful” initiative launched in 2021, aimed at honoring
tribal heritage, meeting federal goals to conserve 30% of public lands
and waters by 2030 and addressing climate change.
The Pit River Tribe has worked to get the federal government to
designate the Sáttítla National Monument. The area is a spiritual center
for the Pit River and Modoc Tribes and encompasses mountain woodlands
and meadows that are home to rare flowers and wildlife.
A number of Native American tribes and environmental groups began
pushing Biden to designate the Chuckwalla National Monument, named after
the large desert lizard, in early 2023. The monument would protect
public lands south of Joshua Tree National Park, spanning the Coachella
Valley region in the west to near the Colorado River.
Advocates say the monument will protect a tribal cultural landscape,
ensure access to nature for local residents and preserve military
history sites.
[to top of second column]
|
President Joe Biden speaks during an interfaith prayer service for
the victims of the deadly New Years truck attack, at St. Louis
Cathedral in New Orleans, Monday, Jan. 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Gerald
Herbert)
“The designation of the Chuckwalla and Sáttítla National Monuments
in California marks an historic step toward protecting lands of
profound cultural, ecological and historical significance for all
Americans," said Carrie Besnette Hauser, president and CEO of the
nonprofit Trust for Public Land.
The new monuments “honor the enduring stewardship of Tribal Nations
and the tireless efforts of local communities and conservation
advocates who fought to safeguard these irreplaceable landscapes for
future generations,'' Hauser said.
National monuments like Chuckwalla and Sáttítla play a key role in
addressing historical injustices and ensuring a more inclusive
telling of America’s history, she said.
The Chuckwalla monument is intended to honor tribal sovereignty by
including local tribes as co-stewards, following in the footsteps of
a recent wave of monuments such as the Bears Ears National Monument
in Utah, which is overseen in conjunction with five tribal nations.
“The protection of the Chuckwalla National Monument brings the
Quechan people an overwhelming sense of peace and joy,” the Fort
Yuma Quechan Tribe said in a statement. “Tribes being reunited as
stewards of this landscape is only the beginning of much-needed
healing and restoration, and we are eager to fully rebuild our
relationship to this place.”
In May, the Biden administration expanded two national monuments in
California — the San Gabriel Mountains in the south and Berryessa
Snow Mountain in the north. In October, Biden designated the Chumash
Heritage National Marine Sanctuary along the coast of central
California, which will include input from the local Chumash tribes
in how the area is preserved.
Last year, the Yurok Tribe in Northern California also became the
first Native people to manage tribal land with the National Park
Service under a historic memorandum of understanding signed by the
tribe, Redwood National and State Parks and the nonprofit Save the
Redwoods League, which is conveying the land to the tribe.
___
Daly reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Jaimie Ding
in Los Angeles and Zeke Miller in Washington contributed to this
report.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved |