This Week at Interior!

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Title: This Week at Interior!
Our weekly recap of events at the U.S. Department of the Interior
This Week at Interior
A person paddles a canoe on a lake

This Week: Interior teams up with USDA on next steps to protect Minnesota's Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness; Vice President Harris visits Lake Mead to highlight Administration efforts to address drought and combat climate change; Interior leaders visit Oregon to focus on conservation, support for rural and Tribal communities and survey wildland fire damage; the Department announces upcoming listening sessions to improve recreational access to the great outdoors for marginalized communities; an odd-looking fish has a great comeback story in the Colorado River; millions around the world take part in the Great ShakeOut of 2021; and a full Moon rises over the Mojave Trails National Monument in our social media Picture of the Week!

Watch the Video

Interior and USDA Team Up for Wilderness Preservation

A lake surrounded by a thick forest

Interior and the Department of Agriculture teamed up this week to announce joint actions aimed at protecting the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness and surrounding watershed in northeastern Minnesota. Boundary Waters is a unique natural wonder, the most visited wilderness area in the United States. Secretary Haaland called it a place that should be enjoyed by and protected for everyone, not only today but for future generations.  

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VP Harris Visits Lake Mead, Highlights Western Drought Dangers

Secretary Haaland walks and talks with a park ranger

Vice President Harris visited Lake Mead this week, where she was briefed on the climate change-fueled drought by Assistant Secretary for Water and Science Tanya Trujillo and officials from both the Bureau of Reclamation and the National Park Service. Western communities are living through the worst drought conditions of the last several decades. The Vice President said the Administration's Build Back Better Agenda, and the Bipartisan Infrastructure Deal, would make the biggest investment in climate resilience in U.S. history and help tackle the climate crisis.

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Interior Leaders Visit Southern Oregon

A panel of people sit at tables while having a discussion

Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs Bryan Newland and Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy, Management and Budget Rachael Taylor visited southern Oregon this week to highlight conservation efforts, survey wildland fire damage and discuss Interior's support for rural and Tribal communities. In a visit to Crater Lake National Park, they highlighted ongoing and future projects to make the park more accessible supported by the Great American Outdoors Act's Legacy Restoration Fund.

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Interior Listening Sessions Aim to Advance Equity in Recreation

A person hikes along a steep rocky ridge

Interior this week announced it will hold five listening sessions—and invite public comment—on the barriers marginalized communities face when it comes to enjoying outdoor activities on public lands. Advancing equity in recreation is a key pillar of the America the Beautiful initiative that seeks to address access to nature and its benefits for all Americans.

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USFWS and Partners Helping Humpback Chub's Recovery 

A person holds a fish that has a very prominent hump on its back

It's an odd-looking fish, but it's got a great comeback story. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service this week reclassified the humpback chub from endangered to threatened under the Endangered Species Act, thanks to the hard work of state, regional, Tribal and federal agencies. The humpback chub was first documented in the Lower Colorado River Basin in the Grand Canyon in the 1940s and the upper Colorado River Basin in the 1970s.

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Great ShakeOut! Millions Take Part in Worldwide Earthquake Drills

A person hides under a desk while performing an earthquake drill

Tens of millions of people around the world took part in the Great Shakeout this week. Founded by the U.S. Geological Survey in 2008, the annual event urges folks to "drop, cover and hold on" in the event of an earthquake. Nearly half of all Americans are exposed to potentially damaging quakes wherever they work or live.

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twitter

Tweet of the Week

Secretary Haaland stands outside and smiles for a head shot

 Secretary Deb Haaland @SecDebHaaland

 

 I know what it’s like to struggle to make ends meet as a parent.

 Childcare should not be an unaffordable luxury—that's not who we

 are as a country. We have an opportunity to invest in our families,

 our workforce, and future generations.

 

A screenshot of a tweet about how she knows what it’s like to struggle to make ends meet as a parent and that childcare should be affordable

 21 Oct

Details |  Retweet

Picture of the Week

An ancient cinder cone volcano is off in the distance. A full moon sets on the horizon

The moon rises over the stunning mosaic of rugged mountain ranges and ancient lava flows of the Mojave Trails National Monument in California. Photo by Bob Wick, BLM.

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