Part 1
Alaska Natives file lawsuit challenging federal overreach in wake of SCOTUS ‘Chevron' ruling
Published: July 10, 2024 11:00pm
Updated: July 11, 2024 10:18am
https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/energy/native-alaskans-file-lawsuit-challenging-federal-overreach-wake-scotus
The lawsuit accuses the BLM of enacting the final rule on the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska without any meaningful engagement with the North Slope Iñupiat, despite unanimous opposition from the elected leaders of the communities.
Alaska Natives are fighting back against the Biden administration’s decision to shut down oil and gas development in northern Alaska, which they say is vital to the prosperity and well being of their communities.
The Voice of the Arctic Iñupiat (VOICE), a nonprofit advocacy group for Native-American communities living on the state’s North Slope, filed a lawsuit Monday against the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and Interior Secretary Deb Haaland over the final BLM’s final rule blocking 13 million acres in their region to oil and gas development.
File
VOICE lawsuit.pdf
The lawsuit argues that the rule goes against the Congressional intent of the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska (NPR-A), which was to increase domestic supplies of oil.
“For over 40 years BLM managed the NPR-A consistent with these Congressional directives, in regular consultation with local stakeholders, and successfully balanced the NPR-A’s primary purpose of furthering oil and gas exploration and development with appropriate conservation and protection measures. Not anymore,” the complaint states.
The lawsuit accuses the BLM of enacting the final rule without any meaningful engagement with the North Slope Iñupiat, despite unanimous opposition from the elected leaders of the communities.
“Our complaint speaks for the North Slope Iñupiat’s voices whom the federal government has chosen to silence, stonewall, and scorn since it blindsided us with its unilateral mandates in September 2023,” said VOICE President Nagruk Harcharek.
The NPR-A is part of ancestral Iñupiat homelands. The reserve is located entirely within the North Slope Borough (NSB), a home-rule government created so that the communities would have a say and benefit from responsible development in the region. The NSB has the authority to tax infrastructure on the North Slope, which provides more than 95% of the communities’ tax revenues.
The decision, according to the complaint, blocks the communities from a vital source of tax revenue that’s contributed to improvements in the quality of life for the NSB. In 1980, the average life expectancy of a person living in the NSB was just 65, which is about the same as Sudan and Iraq today. Today, the average lifespan in the North Slope is about 77 years.
The tax revenues from Alaska’s oil and gas industry have, according to the VOICE’s lawsuit, provided essential public services, including sewer, water, heat, sanitation, schools, clinics, hospitals, wildlife and fisheries management and research, infrastructure, and social and cultural programs. This is in addition to providing jobs and other economic benefits.