Greater Chaco Landscape Sacred Sites
 A few miles north of Chaco Canyon lies
 the remains of an ancient outpost.  It was undoubtedly an imposing and 
impressive place in 900 AD.  Built atop a towering butte, it 
would have been visible for many miles.  At night, great fires would have
 urged weary travelers onward.  Even now, at sunset, for example, or when the 
wind rises, it is an evocative and powerful place.
Yet, today, it has become a different kind of outpost. This 
is where intensive oil and gas development, which has increased over 400 percent in the last decade, completely 
transforms much of the northwestern New Mexico landscape.
On
 this past Monday in Santa Fe, during the first of several congressional
 hearings, tribal leaders and key witnesses spoke about the need for 
stronger Federal oil and gas regulations.  Acoma Pueblo Gov. Brian Valio
 told members of the House Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources 
that not enough is being done to safeguard sacred sites in the Greater 
Chaco Landscape beyond the National Park at Chaco Canyon.  "Many 
cultural resources and sites exist which the Bureau of Land Management 
does not currently recognize", he said.
Our current  administration must honor repeated requests from tribal leaders and 
withdraw lands surrounding Chaco Canyon from future oil and gas leasing. The Bureau of Land Management
 and Bureau of Indian Affairs must finish the long-awaited 
joint management plan for the area.  The plan should be based on a 
detailed viewscape and soundscape field study.  It must include 
significantly
 stronger protections for cultural resources, as well as local 
residents, including limiting the location and scale of development.
We need proper leadership more now than ever to accomplish this.
be strong, be safe, Carlan
 

