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New Mexico Pueblo governors endorse draft federal legislation to protect Caja del Rio landscape

A view of the Caja Del Rio plateau, the subject of forthcoming federal legislation in April 2026 to designate the area as two new protected areas: the Caja del Rio Special Management Area and the Caja del Rio National Conservation Area
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A coalition of New Mexico Pueblo governors last week unanimously voted to endorse forthcoming federal legislation to protect the 107,000-acre expanse of the Caja del Rio plateau, a swath of public lands south of Santa Fe with environmental, historical and spiritual significance to multiple advocacy groups.

The bill, sponsored by U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., would designate the area as two new protected areas, the Caja del Rio Special Management Area and the Caja del Rio National Conservation Area, and thus add limits to new industrial development. Heinrich will introduce the legislation sometime in April, according to Press Secretary Luis Soriano.

Pueblo leaders, and members of the New Mexico congressional delegation for years to limit development on the plateau, joined by coalitions of tribal, Hispanic, outdoor recreation, ranchers and environmental groups.

A Republican-backed effort to sell off public lands last year identified Bureau of Land Management-owned areas to the as available for sale. The sell-offs to move through Congress.

In August, to move forward on a to power Los Alamos National Laboratory, despite.

The plateau, jointly managed by the BLM and U.S. Forest Service, includes many cultural sites, including the La Cieneguilla Petroglyphs, one of the largest concentrations of ancient rock carvings in the state.

The Caja Del Rio is identified as a vital corridor for wildlife and grazing, advocates say, and also a site for spiritual pilgrimage, hunting and firewood for nearby Pueblos and Spanish land grant communities.

The All Pueblo Council of Governor鈥檚 vote Friday to back the legislation shows 鈥渨e all agree the Caja needs to be protected,鈥 Chair Joey Sanchez (Santa Ana Pueblo) said in a statement following the vote.

鈥淭he proposed legislation represents a significant step toward ensuring the long-term protection of the Caja del Rio while honoring its deep cultural and historical significance to Indigenous and local communities,鈥 Sanchez said.

Gov. Raymond Aguilar Jr. of Kewa Pueblo called the bill a 鈥渓andmark piece of legislation鈥 in a statement Friday saying it offers 鈥渁n important step in the co-management of this sacred place by both federal and Pueblo governments.鈥