Deb Haaland
U.S. Secretary of the Interior
1849 C Street, N.W.
Washington DC 20240

Re: The Collaborative Resource Management Plan for the Bears Ears National Monument

 

Dear Madam Secretary Deb Haaland,

We write to you as Tribal leaders in support of the Bears Ears Commission and their role in the co-management of the Bears Ears National Monument. We stand with the five Tribes of the Bears Ears Commission—The Hopi Tribe, Navajo Nation, Ute Mountain Ute Tribe, Zuni Tribe, and the Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation–and their sovereign authority to self-determine their preferred plan for management of the Bears Ears National Monument. 

A Tribally-informed, collaborative Resource Management Plan for Bears Ears establishes a new standard of collaborative and sustainable management of public lands that formally adopts Tribal governance and Traditional Indigenous Knowledge (TIK) as part of the permanent framework for land and resource management in consideration of future generations. Including the time-tested knowledge of those nations ensures that the oldest management approaches continue to benefit the Monument well into the future. 

The years of tireless work and collaboration between the Bears Ears Commission, Bureau of Land Management (BLM), and the U.S. Forest Service (USFS), which culminated in this plan, represent a pivotal shift in federal-Tribal co-stewardship that is long overdue. As the first national monument proposed by a coalition of Tribal Nations, Bears Ears is unprecedented —and the plan for managing its lands and resources must reflect that Tribal role to an equal degree.

We urge you to leverage your leadership and support the sovereign rights of the Bears Ears Commission Tribes and the key contributions they’ve made to the management of Bears Ears National Monument in this plan. A few of these contributions include a Tribally authored NEPA alternative based on TIK which reflects a more holistic approach to managing ancestral homelands, concrete management actions like monitoring and adaptive management to ensure that future decisions regarding the health of our regional landscapes and sacred places are informed by traditional and western scientific data, and increased understanding and models on how TIK can be incorporated into other models of management more broadly.  

As you know, public lands intersect with and are adjacent to Tribal ancestral homelands across the West. Ensuring that Tribal perspectives are meaningfully involved in the protection and management of these lands is a way to respect Tribal Nations, prioritize sustainability for future generations, and move one step closer toward repairing historical injustices. 

Sincerely, 

Bears Ears Commission Tribes
Timothy Nuvangyaoma
Chairman
Hopi Tribe
Buu Nygren
President
Navajo Nation 
Julius T. Murray, III
Business Committee Chairman
Ute Indian Tribe
Manuel Heart
Chairman
Ute Mountain Ute Tribe
Arden Kucate
Governor
Zuni Tribe

 

Supporting Tribes 

 

Mary J. Norris
Chairwoman, Cahto Tribe of Laytonville Rancheria
Anthony Ortiz
Governor, Pueblo of San Felipe
 

Deanne Cheshire
Vice Chair, Big Pine Paiute Tribe

 

Milton Herrera
Governor, Pueblo of Tesuque

 

Reggie Wassana
Governor, Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes

 

E. Michael Silvas
Governor, Pueblo of Ysleta del Sur

 

Michael Dolson
Chairman, Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes

 

Delbert Pino
Lieutenant Governor, Pueblo of Zia

 

Gary Burke
Board of Trustees Chair, Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation

 

Debra Ramirez
Chairwoman, Redwood Valley Little River Band of Pomo Indians

 

Jonathan W. Smith
Chairman, Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs

 

Fawn C. Murphy
Chairperson, Pulikla Tribe of Yurok People

 

Violet Sage Walker
Chairwoman, Northern Chumash Tribal Council

 

Johnny Lehi Jr.
Vice President, San Juan Southern Paiute Tribe

 

Ron Allen
Chairman, Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe 

 

Shawn Davis
Chairman, Scotts Valley Band of Pomo Indians

 

Hope Silvas
Vice-Chair, The Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah

 

Gerald Lewis
Chairman, Yakama Nation

 

Christopher A. Moquino
Governor, Pueblo de San Ildefonso 

 

Joe James
Chairman, Yurok Tribe

 

Bruce Bernstein
Tribal Historic Preservation Officer, Pueblo de San Ildefonso

 

Download the entire letter here.