This Week: Secretary Haaland tours significant civil rights sites in Mississippi and Alabama, part of a multi-state tour exploring how Interior can better tell the story of America; the Secretary commemorates the groundbreaking of the South Fork Wind project; the Bureau of Indian Affairs announces a series of reforms to protect the rights, dignity and safety of those being held in custody; the number of national park visitors is on the rise toward pre-pandemic levels; Interior’s bureaus submit plans to put President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law into action; a $31 million award is made to rehabilitate a portion of the Foothills Parkway; and we head to Maryland’s Eastern Shore for our social media Picture of the Week!
Secretary Haaland Tours Significant Sites in Mississippi
![Secretary Haaland at Medgar & Myrlie Evers National Monument](https://content.govdelivery.com/attachments/fancy_images/USDOI/2022/02/5550309/3968003/s1-sec-haaland-ms_crop.png) Secretary Haaland was on the road this week, taking part in a multi-state tour to explore how Interior can play a role in telling America’s story. First stop was Mississippi, where she visited sites associated with the 1955 murder of 14-year-old Emmet Till. His story captured national attention and helped catalyze the struggle for equal rights in Mississippi and across the nation. The Secretary also visited the Medgar and Myrlie Evers Home National Monument, which celebrates the lives of those two civil rights activists.
Secretary Haaland Honors Voting Rights Champions in Alabama
![Secretary Haaland meets with local leaders in Alabama](https://content.govdelivery.com/attachments/fancy_images/USDOI/2022/02/5550311/3968004/s2-sec-haaland-alabama_crop.png) The Secretary then traveled to Alabama, where she visited sites associated with the civil rights movement. At the Selma Interpretive Center operated by the National Park Service, she met with community leaders and foot soldiers who fought for voting rights in 1965. Then she traveled to visit the Birmingham Civil Rights National Monument, which preserves and interprets the events, stories, and places associated with the nonviolent struggle against racial segregation during the mid-20th century.
Nation’s Second Major Wind Energy Project Breaks Ground
![Secretary Haaland at an offshore wind project groundbreaking with local leaders](https://content.govdelivery.com/attachments/fancy_images/USDOI/2022/02/5550354/3968005/s3-sec-haaland-south-fork_crop.png) Secretary Haaland was in East Hampton, New York this week to commemorate the groundbreaking of the South Fork wind energy project. This is the second commercial-scale, offshore wind energy project approved for federal waters in the United States. The South Fork project will be located offshore Rhode Island and New York and have a capacity of 130 megawatts of wind energy — enough to power over 70,000 homes and businesses. The South Fork project was approved by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management in November 2021.
Bureau of Indian Affairs Announces Reforms to Correctional Program
![A blurry image of fences](https://content.govdelivery.com/attachments/fancy_images/USDOI/2022/02/5550334/3968006/s4-bia-reform_crop.png) The Bureau of Indian Affairs this week announced a series of reforms to the Office of Justice Services Correctional Program to protect the rights, dignity and safety of those being held in custody. BIA launched a three-month review in the Fall of 2021 after concerning reports about the treatment of incarcerated individuals, to include 16 inmate deaths in custody between 2016 and 2020.
Visitation Up at Several National Parks
![Two people walking down a boardwalk surrounded by grass](https://content.govdelivery.com/attachments/fancy_images/USDOI/2022/02/5550362/3968007/s5-nps-visitors-up_crop.png) The National Park Service says the number of park visitors is climbing back to pre-pandemic levels. Nearly 300 million people visited national parks in 2021, an increase of 60 million over 2020 numbers. And some of the nation's most famous parks set a record for the number of visitors last year.
![Secretary Haaland listens to environmental activists in a Los Angeles neighborhood](https://content.govdelivery.com/attachments/fancy_images/USDOI/2022/02/5551041/3968008/s6-bil-plans_crop.png) Several Interior bureaus this week submitted their plans for putting President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law into action. Those plans are a significant step in the Department’s efforts to help communities tackle the climate crisis and address legacy pollution while creating good-paying union jobs, advancing environmental justice, and boosting local economies.
![A picture of the Foothills Parkway in the fall](https://content.govdelivery.com/attachments/fancy_images/USDOI/2022/02/5550348/3968009/s7-foothills-parkway_crop.png) The National Park Service this week announced a $31 million award for the rehabilitation of 17-mile stretch of the Foothills Parkway. The funding is made available from a Great American Outdoors Act project with the Federal Highway Administration. Congress established the Foothills Parkway in 1944 as a scenic parkway that would provide magnificent views into the Great Smoky Mountains National Park in North Carolina and Tennessee.
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