Preserving Chaco Canyon and the Greater Chaco Region
Nestled in the San Juan Basin in northwestern New Mexico is Chaco Canyon (recognized as the Chaco Culture National Historical Park) within the sacred landscape known as the Greater Chaco Region. Between 850 CE and 1250 CE, ancestral Pueblo people, who occupied Chaco Canyon over a span of 400 years, produced remarkable archeological structures and developed a complex civilization that included a network of roads, trade routes, and an in-depth knowledge of astronomy. These achievements continue to amaze modern scholars and experts. Following their time at Chaco Canyon, ancestral Pueblo people migrated to their present homelands, and these migration routes also hold many important cultural resources. Today, the Pueblos maintain deep cultural ties to Chaco Canyon and the Greater Chaco Region through pilgrimage, song, and prayer. The Greater Chaco Region holds profound cultural importance for many Indigenous people in the Southwest, including the Pueblos, the Hopi Tribe, the Navajo Nation, and other Indian Tribes, affirming Chaco Canyon and the Greater Chaco Region’s rich heritage and unparalleled significance.
Threats to Chaco Canyon
Presently, Chaco Canyon and the Greater Chaco Region are under significant threat from those who seek to extract deposits of oil, gas, and minerals for energy development. Approximately 90 percent of federal lands in the Greater Chaco Region have already been leased for mineral development. (Map by Archeology Southwest)
Click map for larger view.
Pueblo Efforts to Protect Chaco Canyon
The All Pueblo Council of Governors (“APCG”), comprised of 20 member federally recognized Indian Pueblos, maintains a nuanced and pragmatic two-part approach towards protecting the sacred landscape of the Greater Chaco Region: 1) seeking withdrawal of federal lands and minerals from future mineral development in an especially critical approximately 10-mile withdrawal area surrounding Chaco Culture National Historical Park and including its outliers; and 2) seeking sufficient tribally-led cultural resources studies and tribal consultation preceding all other development decisions, including lease sales, throughout the Greater Chaco Region.
APCG’s Collective Advocacy for Withdrawal
- Appropriations Moratorium: Since at least the Obama and Trump Administrations, informal pauses on new mineral development on federal lands have been in place in the 10-mile withdrawal area. In 2019, Congress within its appropriations legislation enacted a moratorium solidifying this pause, and it has maintained this moratorium in each enacted appropriations bill since that time.
- Administrative Withdrawal: In November 2021, the Biden Administration announced to Tribal leaders that among the President’s top five priorities for Indian Country would be to initiate steps to protect Chaco Canyon and the Greater Chaco Region. The Administration said it would begin considering an administrative withdrawal under the Federal Land Policy and Management Act. After an extensive public comment, tribal consultation, and production of environmental analyses, the Department announced its decision to complete the administrative withdrawal of federal lands and minerals from future mineral development in the 10-mile withdrawal area for a 20-year period.
- Permanent Legislation: Since 2018, the New Mexico Congressional Delegation has introduced the Chaco Cultural Heritage Area Protection Act, which would permanently withdraw federal lands from future mineral development in the 10-mile withdrawal area. This legislation contains protections designed by the Pueblos and the Navajo Nation—who together requested the New Mexico Congressional Delegation introduce the bill.
APCG’s Collective Advocacy for Tribally-Led Cultural Resource Studies and Tribal Consultation
- Tribally-Led Cultural Resource Study: The Pueblos worked closely with the Department of the Interior during the Trump Administration on a Tribally-led cultural resource study within the Greater Chaco Region. In 2019, Congress appropriated funding, which was split between the Pueblos and the Navajo Nation, and thereafter Congress appropriated additional funding so that the Pueblos’ proposed study was fully funded. The Pueblos’ study is set to be completed in the fall of 2023.
- Resource Management Plan Amendment: The Pueblos are participating in the Department of the Interior’s efforts to amend the Resource Management Plan dictating how the federal lands in a large portion of the Greater Chaco Region will be utilized for many years to come. The Pueblos submitted extensive comments on the draft National Environmental Policy Act Environmental Impact Statement, and APCG also serves as a Cooperating Agency. The Pueblos have also participated in preparation of the National Historic Preservation Act Programmatic Agreement, and APCG serves as a Consulting Party.
- Honoring Chaco Initiative: The Department of the Interior is engaged in an innovative approach to making land management decisions in the Greater Chaco Region, which it calls the Honoring Chaco Initiative. The Department has said it is exploring ways it can manage existing energy development, honor sensitive areas that are important to Indian Tribes, and build collaborative management frameworks for the Greater Chaco Region. The Pueblos and APCG have participated in this work.
Department’s Withdrawal
After years of collaborative advocacy by many stakeholders, including the Pueblos, the Department of the Interior in June 2023 issued Public Land Order No. 7923, which withdrew for 20 years the remaining federal lands from new mineral development in an approximately 10-mile area surrounding the Chaco Culture National Historical Park. This withdrawal does not prevent development on Tribal lands or Allottee lands, and it does not stop development on federal lands that is already underway. Indeed, the Department’s withdrawal makes more permanent the current status quo—where the Department years ago paused new mineral development on these federal lands and Congress later enacted annual moratoriums.
H.R. 4374
Now congressional bill H.R. 4374 seeks to nullify the Department’s withdrawal. This perilous situation endangers not just the physical integrity of Chaco Canyon and the Greater Chaco Region, but also the cultural, spiritual, and historical threads that bind the Pueblos and other Indian Tribes to this sacred space. The Greater Chaco Region is more than just land; it is a testament to shared history, a reflection of cultural diversity, and a sacred space that demands our utmost protection.
FACT SHEETS
Read the 10 Mile Withdrawal Fact Sheet PDF
APCG RESOLUTIONS SUPPORTING THE PROTECTION OF CHACO
- RESOLUTION NO. APCG 2023-10 – SEE PDF >
- OPPOSING H.R. 4374 “ENERGY OPPORTUNITIES FOR ALL ACT”
- RESOLUTION NO. APCG 2023-08 – SEE PDF >
- MEMORIALIZING PRESIDENT BIDEN AND INTERIOR SECRETARY HAALAND’S DECISION TO ADMINISTRATIVELY WITHDRAW PUBLIC LANDS FROM FUTURE MINERAL DEVELOPMENT IN 10-MILE WITHDRAWAL AREA SURROUNDING CHACO CULTURE NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK
- RESOLUTION NO. APCG 2022-06 – SEE PDF >
- SUPPORTING THE DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR’S PROPOSED ADMINISTRATIVE WITHDRAWAL OF FEDERAL LANDS AND MINERALS SURROUNDING THE CHACO CULTURE NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK
- RESOLUTION NO. APCG 2021-04 – SEE PDF >
- SUPPORTING THE 30 X 30 CAMPAIGN TO PROTECT 30 PERCENT OF U.S. LANDS AND INLAND WATERS AND 30 PERCENT OF U.S. OCEANS BY 2030
- RESOLUTION NO. APCG 2019-10 – SEE PDF >
- REAFFIRMING SUPPORTF O R LEGISLATION WITHDRAWING CERTAIN FEDERAL LAND IN THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO SURROUNDING CHACO CULTURE NATIONAL HISTORIC PARK FROM ALL FORMS OF MINERAL AND GROTHERMAL LEASING
- RESOLUTION NO. APCG 2018-27 – SEE PDF >
- AUTHORIZATION FOR THE ALL PUEBLO COUNCIL OF GOVERNORS TO SUBMIT TO THE DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT A PROPOSAL FOR A JOINT PUEBLO ETHNOGRAPHIC STUDY OF THE GREATER CHACO REGION
- RESOLUTION NO. APCG 2018-02 – SEE PDF >
- APPROVING BRINGING A LEGAL ACTION SEEKING TO ENJOIN THE UNITED STATES BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT FARMINGTON FIELD OFFICE FROM CONDUCTING THE COMPETITIVE OIL AND GAS LEASE SALE NOW SCHEDULED FOR MARCH 8, 2018
- RESOLUTION NO. APCG 2017-12 – SEE PDF >
- CALLING FOR A MORATORIUM ON ALL PERMITTING AND LEASING FOR OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENT IN AREAS THAT WOULD
IMPACT TRADITIONAL CULTURAL PROPERTIES AND SACRED SITES IN GREATER CHACO REGION
- CALLING FOR A MORATORIUM ON ALL PERMITTING AND LEASING FOR OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENT IN AREAS THAT WOULD
- RESOLUTION NO. APCG 2014-04 – SEE PDF >
- SUPPORT FOR THE PROTECTION OF CHACO CANYON AND ALL TRADITIONAL CULTURAL PROPERTIES AND SACRED SITES AFFILIATED WITH CHACO CANYON
IN THE NEWS
ALL PUEBLO COUNCIL OF GOVERNORS CONCLUDES HISTORIC ADVOCACY MISSION IN WASHINGTON D.C. TO PROTECT THE GREATER CHACO REGION
ALL PUEBLO COUNCIL OF GOVERNORS CONCLUDES HISTORIC ADVOCACY MISSION IN WASHINGTON D.C. TO PROTECT THE GREATER CHACO REGION
All Pueblo Council of Governors Travel to Washington D.C. to Advocate for the Preservation of the Greater Chaco Region
All Pueblo Council of Governors Travel to Washington D.C. to Advocate for the Preservation of the Greater Chaco Region
All Pueblo Council of Governors Celebrates and Reaffirms Support for DOI’s Withdrawal of Federal Lands from New Oil and Gas Development Despite Protests at Chaco Culture National Historical Park
All Pueblo Council of Governors Celebrates and Reaffirms Support for DOI’s Withdrawal of Federal Lands from New Oil and Gas Development Despite Protests at Chaco Culture National Historical Park
Historic 20-Year Administrative Withdrawal of Public Lands from Mineral Development in Greater Chaco Region Sacred Landscape
(Albuquerque, N.M.) – Today, the Department of the Interior issued a historic decision to administratively withdraw public lands from mineral development in Chaco Canyon. This landmark announcement marks a turning point in the protection of the Greater Chaco Region and sets a new precedent in the federal government’s management of sacred landscapes. The Department is administratively withdrawing public lands from […]
Legislation Reintroduced to Permanently Withdraw Federal Lands from Mineral Development in Greater Chaco Region
Legislation Reintroduced to Permanently Withdraw Federal Lands from Mineral Development in Greater Chaco Region
Biden-Harris Administration Protects Chaco Region, Tribal Cultural Sites from Development
6/2/23 Secretary Haaland withdraws public lands surrounding Chaco Culture National Historical Park from future leasing, mining claims