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Richardson Asks Obama for Otero Monument

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Monday, November 8, 2010   

SANTA FE, N.M. - He's asking the president for a new National Monument for New Mexico. Gov. Richardson has sent a letter to the White House asking President Obama to declare Otero Mesa a National Monument under the Antiquities Act of 1906.

Marie Vallejos is outreach coordinator with the New Mexico Wilderness Alliance, one of a coalition of groups working to protect the area since it was targeted for potential energy development. She says it's full of history worth preserving.

"There's two stops that are out there from the Butterfield Trail when the mail used to go through; there are thousands of petroglyphs out there. It's the one area where people can still get out and hike and just get out in the wilderness."

She says Otero Mesa is the largest and wildest Chihuahuan desert grassland remaining on public lands in the United States. It is home to mule deer, mountain lion, bald eagles, the endangered AplomadofFalcon, and the state's healthiest herd of pronghorn antelope. The Salt Basin aquifer under the mesa is considered to be the state's largest untapped freshwater resource.

Opponents to permanent protection of the area say it would "lock up" natural resources that provide much-needed jobs for the region. But Vallejos said plenty of tourist dollars would arrive along with the declaration of a new monument. She says that's more benefit than New Mexicans are likely to see from energy development.

"It's not going to bring our gas bills down. It's going to profit the gas company itself. It's not going to bring our gas bills down."

In the past, locals have complained that energy development jobs in the southern part of the state have often gone to out-of-state workers.



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