>>6128879 lb
Bears Ears perhaps?
https://hewlett.org/newsroom/new-bears-ears-community-engagement-fund-support-cultural-resource-protection-community-partnerships/
In designating the monument, the president also established a Bears Ears Commission to ensure that tribal expertise and traditional knowledge help inform the management of the Bears Ears National Monument, and care for its national treasures. This marked the first time tribes will have such a role in managing a national monument.
To support robust tribal involvement in managing the monument, and also to support local community efforts to enhance resource conservation in the monument and to create economic opportunity, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, Wyss Foundation, the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation, the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, the Wilburforce Foundation, and the Grand Canyon Trust are establishing the Bears Ears Community Engagement Fund. This fund will support community and tribal involvement and promote sustainable use and enjoyment of the new monument.
The Bear Ears Community Engagement Fund will provide resources to minimize threats to the Bears Ears National Monument stemming from looting and vandalism; support local community and tribal engagement; sponsor visitor education and cultural resource inventory and interpretation; promote traditional resource stewardship and use; and support sustainable recreation management by local communities.
https://www.wyssfoundation.org/news/new-bears-ears-community-engagement-fund-established
Recognizing the world-class cultural and natural resources of the newly established Bears Ears National Monument in Utah, a group of philanthropic foundations are committing $1.5 million to strengthen collaborative management of the area and ensure inclusion of local community voices.
President Obama designated the Bears Ears National Monument on December 28, 2016 to safeguard one of the nation’s most significant and spectacular cultural landscapes and to honor five native tribal nations—the Hopi, Navajo, Ute Mountain Ute, Zuni, and Ute Indian Tribe—who, combined, prize more than 100,000 archaeological, rock art, and sacred cultural sites within the monument. With the support of another 30 tribal governments, those five tribal nations joined together for the first time in history to ask the president to designate a national monument to protect their sacred sites, which have long been threatened by ongoing looting, vandalism, and development plans.