The fight against uranium mining has been part of Dianna Sue White Dove Uqualla鈥檚 life since before she can remember. Uqualla, 64, is Havasupai, and she grew up听several thousand feet below the south rim of the Grand Canyon in Supai Village. When she was a child, Uqualla listened to town elders lament the development of mines on the tribe鈥檚 ancestral territory, and as a young woman, she read about how radioactive led to hundreds of cases of cancer in nearby native communities. In recent decades, Uqualla has led protests against the mines, including听the , which is located on sacred ground for the Havasupai.
鈥淭here鈥檚 been a lot of prayer, a lot of singing, asking the land and our ancestors to listen to us,鈥 Uqualla told 国产吃瓜黑料.听鈥淭he elders before me fought against it, and now I鈥檓 an elder and I鈥檓 still fighting.鈥

On Tuesday, Uqualla and the Havasupai notched a groundbreaking victory in this decades-long battle. President Biden used his authority under the Antiquities Act of 1906 to create Baaj Nwaavjo I鈥檛ah Kukventi Grand Canyon National Monument, a protected area that encompasses 1,562 total square miles in northern Arizona. The new monument鈥攖he fifth designated by the president鈥攊s split into three distinct regions adjacent to the Grand Canyon: two are near the north rim, while the other, near the south rim, abuts the Havasupai reservation. The designation protects the area against all future mineral claims, and effectively halts developers from prospecting new uranium mines forever.
鈥淭oday marks a historic step in preserving the majesty of this place,鈥 President Biden said in a press conference on Tuesday. 鈥淭he Grand Canyon is first among American landmarks, sacred to tribal nations, revered by every American. It speaks to the soul of Americans and reminds us who we are.鈥
Biden announced the national monument in the town of Tusayan near the Grand Canyon鈥檚 south rim. In his speech, the president repeated the importance of protecting tribal lands as a way to preserve all the chapters in American history鈥攊ncluding the bad ones.
鈥淲e鈥檙e all awed by the Grand Canyon, but fewer are aware of its full history. More than a dozen tribal nations have lived here, hunted and gathered, and prayed on these lands,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd 100 years ago they were forced out. They fought for decades to return to these lands, to clear them of contamination, to preserve their shared legacy.鈥
Indeed, tribal nations and conservation groups have for years protested mineral extraction in and around the Grand Canyon, and in recent years have petitioned the government to raise greater protections for land and water. In 2009, U.S. representative Raul Grijalva of Arizona proposed the Grand Canyon Watersheds Protection Act, which proposed curbing uranium claims on a million acres of public land surrounding the national park. The proposed law failed, but in 2012, the Obama Administration ordered a 20-year ban on all new uranium claims on the same swath of land.
Activists urged Obama to designate the land a national monument under the Antiquities Act鈥攐ne proposal called for the , while another proposed the . But Obama backed away from both proposals after the ideas received an icy response from state lawmakers, and then Arizona governor Doug Ducey, who threatened to sue over the proposal.
But Arizona鈥檚 shifting political sentiments opened the door for the idea to gain new life in recent years. A displayed strong bipartisan support for banning uranium mining near the Grand Canyon. Governor Katie Hobbs and Senator Mark Kelly (both Democrats) told the Biden Administration that they backed the idea, as did Senator Kyrsten Sinema, an Independent.
In April, a officially called on Biden to create a new national monument. In the months after the request, the Bureau of Land Management held a听, with dozens of people voicing support for the plan.
Tuesday鈥檚 designation does not end all concerns about听uranium extraction, however. According to a by the White House, mining claims that predate 2012 will remain in place, and two approved mines within the monument will be allowed to operate. Arizona currently has no operational uranium mines, but a company called Energy Fuels Resources Inc. has been developing the Pinyon Plain Mine just south of Grand Canyon National Park for several years. That project will be allowed to continue.
Curtis Moore, vice president of Energy Fuels, that the company intends to begin mining its Grand Canyon claim within two years. Moore pushed back on Tuesday鈥檚 announcement. 鈥淚t just doesn鈥檛 seem like great policy to be locking up our best uranium deposits,鈥 he said.
Biden鈥檚 words on Tuesday echoed that of Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, who on Monday said that the designation is another important step toward making native tribes more involved in overseeing public lands. 鈥淲e are in a new era, one in which we honor tribally led conservation, advanced co-stewardship and care about the well-being of native people,鈥 Haaland said.
The new national monument鈥檚 name includes two indigenous references: Baj nwaavjo means 鈥渨here tribes roam鈥 in the Havasupai language, while I鈥檛ah kukveni means 鈥渙ur ancestral footprints鈥 to the Hopi people. A delegation of tribal leaders stood adjacent to the president as he gave his speech and then signed the designation. Uqualla was among the group鈥攕he led a blessing alongside tribal dancers during the ceremony.
鈥淚 am so grateful because of the work that has gone into this鈥攕ome of it was a lifetime of work from our elders,鈥 Uqualla told 国产吃瓜黑料. 鈥淭hey told me 鈥業鈥檓 not going to be here to see the victory but you will.鈥 That is a beautiful thought.鈥