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Secretary Jewell Issues Secretarial Order to
Encourage Tribal Role
in Managing Interior Lands with Native American Connections Cooperative Initiative Builds on Progress to Advance Tribal Self-Determination and Self-Government
FAIRBANKS, Alaska – U.S.
Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell today
announced a Secretarial Order encouraging
cooperative management opportunities between the
Department’s land and water managers and
federally-recognized tribes. The
Secretarial Order sets out a framework to
ensure that Native communities have the
opportunity to assume meaningful and substantive
roles in managing public lands that have special
geographical, historical and cultural
connections to the tribes.
Secretary Jewell announced the Order at the
annual Alaska Federation of Natives Conference
in Fairbanks, Alaska. In her remarks, Jewell
shared that her Order facilitates collaborative
partnerships and the integration of tribal
ecological knowledge, practices and concerns
into the management of federal lands, waters and
natural resources where there is a connection to
tribal communities.
“This Secretarial Order reflects the Obama
Administration’s deep commitment to strengthen
respect between the United States government and
Native American and Alaska Native leaders and
communities while boosting our efforts to
increase tribal self-determination and
self-governance,” said Secretary Jewell. “This
kind of collaboration with tribal nations will
help ensure that we’re appropriately and
genuinely integrating indigenous expertise,
experience and perspectives into the management
of public lands.”
Interior land and water management agencies
covered by the Secretarial Order include the
National Park Service, Bureau of Land
Management, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management and Bureau of
Reclamation. The Secretarial Order directs these
agencies to identify opportunities and undertake
efforts to partner with tribes in the management
of their land and water resources. These efforts
include identifying key personnel to explore
such collaborative management arrangements;
developing bureau-specific guidance for
collaborative partnerships with tribes; and
engaging in consultation with tribal governments
at bureau, regional, and unit levels to better
understand tribal interests in specific
collaborative opportunities.
Interior Deputy Secretary Michael L. Connor, who
has been a champion for collaborative management
opportunities with indigenous communities during
his tenure, noted that the Secretarial Order is
guided by
Interior’s federal trust responsibility to
federally-recognized tribes and self-governance
principles. Connor helped negotiate the
successful
Kuskokwim River Pilot Project in Alaska
which is a cooperative partnership between the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Kuskokwin
River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission for the
management of fish and wildlife resources in the
area.
“This Order ensures a continued connection
between Native communities and federal lands
where we share complementary interests in
conserving and managing fish, wildlife and their
habitats, and protecting cultural resources,”
said Deputy Secretary Connor. “Cooperative
management and other collaborative partnerships
with tribes help ensure the protection of public
lands and resources, guides appropriate
development, and assists in better understanding
and addressing the effects of climate change.”
As
outlined, the Secretarial Order guides
Interior’s land management agencies to identify
opportunities, consult with tribes, and
implement cooperative management agreements or
other collaborative partnerships as appropriate
that relate to:
The
Order does not address ‘co-management,’ which
are situations where there is a specific legal
basis that requires co-management of natural
resources or that makes co-management otherwise
necessary. In some instances, such as management
of the salmon harvest in the Pacific Northwest,
co-management has been established by law.
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