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Navajo Nation President Buu Nygren is against Biden Administation’s Buffer Zone around Chaco Canyon

Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, a Laguna Pueblo woman, at Chaco Canyon in New Mexico.
Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, a Laguna Pueblo woman, at Chaco Canyon in New Mexico.

The area surrounding Chaco Canyon is sacred ground for many Native American tribes. Ancestral Puebloan peoples built sacred sites throughout the Chaco region, but today, the landscape is a patchwork of public, private, and tribal lands.

According to the Navajo Nation, some 5000 Navajo people own 160-acre allotments. Generations of Navajo people have passed down some of these parcels.

The order filed last week by US Secretary of Interior Deb Haaland does not affect tribal lands, only federal lands.

Navajo allottees can still legally lease their lands for oil and gas development. However, with federal lands off the table, the oil and gas industry is unlikely to invest in the infrastructure needed for a local energy economy.

President Buu Nygren says the drilling moratorium on federal lands makes it nearly impossible for Navajo allottees near Chaco Canyon to lease their lands.

For them to force upon us a 10-mile freeze of our lands, to me, that's quite unfair and disheartening,” said Nygren.

President Nygren says his team is currently looking into the financial fallout of the Biden administration’s drilling moratorium.

“These allottees are the closest thing we have to land ownership in Indian country. And to do it to them in this manner, which is unjust and unfair to them, is just unbelievable. In this case, you've got over 5000 allottees that are directly affected financially,” said Nygren.

Clark Adomaitis is a shared radio reporter for KSUT in Ignacio, CO, and KSJD in Cortez, CO for the Voices from the Edge of the Colorado Plateau project.