President Joe Biden is establishing two new national monuments in California that will honor Native American tribes, the White House confirmed Tuesday, as Biden seeks to conserve at least 30% of U.S. lands and waters by 2030.
Proclamations set to be signed Tuesday will create the Chuckwalla National Monument in Southern California near Joshua Tree National Park and the Sáttítla National Monument in Northern California. The declarations bar drilling and mining and other development on the 624,000-acre Chuckwalla site and the roughly 225,000 acres near the Oregon border in Northern California.
The new monuments will protect clean water for communities, honor areas of cultural significance to tribal nations and Indigenous peoples, and enhance access to nature, the White House said.
Biden, who has two weeks left in office, is set to visit Los Angeles and the Eastern Coachella Valley on Tuesday — joined by Gov. Gavin Newsom — after meeting on Monday with the families of the victims in the New Year’s attack in New Orleans.
Biden announced Monday that he would ban new offshore oil and gas drilling in most U.S. coastal waters, including in California and other West Coast states. The plan is intended to block possible efforts by the incoming Trump administration to expand offshore drilling.