
Lisa Murkowski
46:30 - 47:31
"I want to thank Senator Heinrich for your engagement on this. I understand your view towards conservation, and we respect those— the concern that we have from so many back home is that when we're looking at an area where we already have so much of our land that is federal, so much of our lands that are already in conservation status, there's just not a lot left over."
“I want to thank Senator Heinrich for your engagement on this. I understand your view towards conservation, and we respect those— the concern that we have from so many back home is that when we're looking at an area where we already have so much of our land that is federal, so much of our lands that are already in conservation status, there's just not a lot left over.”
And I think there's good reason for that because it comes back to the inequity that we have seen, uh, and an effort to do right by the Alaska Native peoples who were excluded so many decades ago. So again, I want to thank all who have continued to work with us, and I want to thank Senator Heinrich for your engagement on this. I understand your view towards conservation, and we respect those— the concern that we have from so many back home is that when we're looking at an area where we already have so much of our land that is federal, so much of our lands that are already in conservation status, there's just not a lot left over. And so again, making sure that we can get ourselves to a good place with this is, is most appreciated. I appreciate your willingness to have this, this measure move out by voice today.
The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee voted July 16 to advance legislation that would let five Southeast Alaska Native communities excluded from the 1971 Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act form urban corporations and receive land entitlements, sending the bill to the full Senate.
