PENINSULA POLL BACKGROUNDER: Government considering allowing tribes to harvest in national parks

  • By Felicia Fonseca The Associated Press
  • Monday, April 20, 2015 3:37pm
  • News

By Felicia Fonseca

The Associated Press

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — Members of the Hualapai tribe in northwestern Arizona occupied the Grand Canyon long before it became a national park.

They collected fruit from cacti and pine nuts for food, cedar and mesquite to weave baskets, and materials to fashion cradleboards for their children.

The National Park Service said it recognizes that tribes throughout the nation need such resources to sustain their cultures and Monday proposed a system to let them remove plants from national parks for traditional uses.

The agency’s current rules prevent tribal members from doing so, although it has been allowed under informal agreements at individual parks.

“It was pretty much on a case-by-case basis,” said Joe Watkins, American Indian officer for the Park Service.

“The rule itself is going to put a little more onus on the tribes.”

Under the proposal, tribal members would have to prove a traditional association to the land and describe the plants they want to take and how the material will be used.

Park officials would then conduct an environmental assessment before granting a permit, generally within three to six months, Watkins said.

A public comment period on the proposal runs through July 20.

Some statutes and treaty rights already give tribes access to national parks to gather plants, but the regulations aren’t consistent across the Park Service.

For example, legislation that created El Malpais National Monument in New Mexico included language that gives Native Americans nonexclusive entry to the land marked by molten lava for traditional and religious purposes, including gathering pine nuts.

Watkins said some California tribes might seek permits to gather willow shoots for traditional use, while tribes near Big Bend National Park in Texas might want to gather mesquite berries that are used in ceremonial dress.

The rules won’t change for the general public, which is allowed to gather fruit and nuts from certain parks with permission.

“Generally it’s ‘look and don’t touch’ when it comes to animals, vegetables, minerals in the parks,” said Park Service spokesman Jeff Olson.

_________

Comments should be sent to the desk officer for the Department of the Interior by fax at 202-395-5806 or by e-mail to OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov. Provide an email copyl to madonna_baucum@nps.gov or by mail to Information Collection Clearance Officer, National Park Service, 1849 C St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20240. Reference proposal No. “1024-AD84” in the subject line of comments.

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