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Southwestern Region

 
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Southwestern Region
333 Broadway SE [map]
Albuquerque, NM 87102
(505) 842-3292
TTY: (505) 842-3198

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Tribal Relations

The mission of the Southwestern Region Tribal Relations Program is to:

  • Provide Tribes equal opportunity and access to Forest Service programs.
  • Eliminate barriers to Tribal participation.
  • Improve overall knowledge of Tribe and Tribal cultures.
  • Develop partnerships and accomplish common goals in accordance with the Forest Service mission, the National Tribal implementation team report, and Regional priorities.

The Region consults and works directly with 43 sovereign Native American Tribes located in Arizona and New Mexico and an additional 9 tribes from surrounding states who have interest in our activities principally due to location of aboriginal lands. Tribes are engaged with the Southwestern Region in virtually every aspect of land management from fuels reduction to preservation of sacred sites. Their ancient cultures, traditions, and knowledge which help define the American Southwest also assist the agency in making effective land and resource management decisions that conserve the environment for generations to come.

National Forest Systems land in the Southwest shares 637 miles of common boundary with Tribal lands in Arizona and New Mexico or nearly one-third of all FS shared boundary with tribes (see map below).

The total land area of reservations and federal non-reservation trust lands in Arizona and New Mexico is an unprecedented 20% of the combined states land area.

Tribes in Arizona and New Mexico represent nearly 5 percent of the combined States' population; 5 times the presence of Native Americans within the total U.S. population.


Coincidence Boundaries Forest Service/Indian Lands

Common Boundaries FS/Indian Lands in Arizona and New Mexico.

(Click on image for larger view)
Coincidence Boundaries in Arizona - 524 miles
Coincidence Boundaries in New Mexico - 313 miles


Occupancy & Use of Forest Lands
Exclusive use of Forest Service lands by Tribe for traditional and cultural purposes.

FSM 1563.7 - Voluntary Closures. Forest Service units shall respond in a timely manner to tribal requests for voluntary closures of specific areas for tribal traditional cultural uses. When considering such requests, FS line officers should consult with appropriate tribal officials and traditional leaders regarding the need for appropriate signing, educational material, alternative locations, and scheduling. See FSH 1509.13 for guidelines on voluntary closures.

Legal guidance:

HOT TOPICS

Tribal Forest Protection Act

Cave Rock Decision
- Fact Sheet (RTF, 493kb)
- Bench Onion (PDF, 745kb)  

 

Key FS-Tribal
Relationships

Consultation & Collaboration

Reburial & NAGPRA

Regional Tribal specialists and Heritage Program Managers are assisting Tribes with repatriation and reburial of more than 5,000 human remains and 17,000 funerary objects await in accordance with requirements of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, far more than any other FS Region. The FS National NAGPRA coordinator is housed in the Southwestern Region.

Special Forest Products

The agency is developing new policy on the use of non-timber, special forest products. This policy has not yet been circulated for public comment.

Cooperative Forestry

Research & Development

Legislative

Training & Education

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U.S. Forest Service - Southwestern Region
Last Modified: Thursday, 22 May 2008 at 10:54:10 EDT


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