BLM Proposes Removal Of Land Protections Around Chaco Culture Natl. Park

"The U.S. Bureau of Land Management opened a seven-day public comment period on March 31 as part of its proposal to open 336,425 acres of public lands in the Greater Chaco Region in New Mexico to oil and gas drilling. If the proposal moves forward, new oil and gas leasing and development on federal lands will be allowed within 10 miles of Chaco Culture National Historical Park, even on lands directly bordering the park. 

In 2023, under the Biden administration, Public Land Order 7923 put the public lands surrounding Chaco Culture National Historical Park off limits to unchecked extractive development for 20 years. The new proposal seeks to undo the order.  

“Chaco Cultural National Historical Park has incalculable ecological and historical value. It is too special to be exposed to oil and gas drilling,” said Environment New Mexico Great Outdoors Director Ellen Montgomery. “The park is one of the last sanctuaries for desert animals seeking respite from surrounding drilling and human interference. Protecting this special place has overwhelming public support in New Mexico and across the country. The protections enacted in 2023 should be left in place.”

In addition to being an area of natural beauty and home to thousands of archaeological and cultural sites, the Greater Chaco Landscape is host to hundreds of bird species, pronghorn, rattlesnakes and bobcats. Chaco Canyon has also been designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site and is central to the cultural identity, traditions and ongoing practices of Indigenous peoples in the region."

National Parks Traveler had the story April 1, 2026.

Source: National Parks Traveler, 04/02/2026