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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Jessica Hill

Biden to visit Southern Nevada for monument designation

LAS VEGAS — President Joe Biden will visit Nevada next week to designate Avi Kwa Ame as a national monument, sources say.

Biden announced late November during a tribal nations summit that Avi Kwa Ame, located in Southern Nevada, will become a national monument.

His visit to the proposed national monument will likely take place on Wednesday, sources say, although the specific date and further details need to be confirmed.

“We’re incredibly hopeful and excited to welcome President Biden to Nevada in preparation for this incredibly crucial monument designation,” said Taylor Patterson, executive director of Native Voters Alliance Nevada, in a statement.

Avi Kwa Ame, which means “Spirit Mountain” in Mojave and is pronounced “Ah-VEE-qua-may,” has been a popular site for outdoor recreation for years, and has been a significant cultural site for a dozen Yuman-speaking tribes that have traced their origins to the mountain.

The Avi Kwa Ame Coalition has led the calls for 450,000 acres of land stretching from the Newberry mountains in the east to the New York South McCullough, Castle and Piute mountains in the west to be protected and preserved for future generations from development.

Rep. Dina Titus, D-Nev., has also been a staunch supporter of the designation and introduced legislation in the House to designate it as a national monument.

While the national monument will cover 450,000 acres, Spirit Mountain itself is located past the town of Searchlight, near the census designated place Cal-Nev-Ari and about a 90-minute drive from Las Vegas. It is designated as a traditional cultural property on the National Register of Historic Places.

The Honor Avi Kwa Ame coalition said in a statement following reports of Biden’s visit that it has been eager for the official designation of the sacred land.

“We cannot wait to welcome the President to Nevada for this historic action that will safeguard these hundreds of thousands of acres in southern Nevada bearing great cultural, ecological, and economic significance to our state,” the coalition said in a statement.

Last year, supporters gathered in Laughlin where more than 200 urged for the protection of Avi Kwa Ame, and supporters have also gathered more than 110,000 petition signatures, according to the coalition.

The Fort Mojave Indian Tribe welcomed Biden’s upcoming trip, the tribe said in a statement Tuesday.

“President Biden’s Administration continues to demonstrate through their government-wide approach to Tribal Consultation the great opportunities that exist to respond to climate challenges when Tribal Nations are included in the solutions,” the tribe wrote in the statement.

“We have been disappointed by broken promises from the federal government before, but we are hopeful next week will be the beginning of a new chapter,” Patterson said. “We look forward to attending the signing ceremony and seeing this process through, and celebrating this historic win along with President Biden and his administration.”

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