Round River Conservation Studies

For The Protection Of Navajo Cultural And Wilderness Values In San Juan County

  • Amount
    $75,000
  • Program
  • Date Awarded
    11/12/2013
  • Term
    12.0 Months
  • Type of Support
    Project
Overview
This grant would support Round River Conservation Studies’ work in San Juan County, Utah, to protect 2 million acres of fragile and culturally significant public land important to the Navajo people. Round River would work closely with, and provide support to, Dine Bikeyah, a Navajo group that has promoted the protection of large parts of the county. Together they are collaborating with San Juan County to develop a protection proposal all parties will support.
About the Grantee
Grantee Website
www.roundriver.org 
Address
284 W 400 N Ste 105, Salt Lake Cty, UT, 84103, United States
Grants to this Grantee
for the protection of Navajo cultural and wilderness values in San Juan County  
This grant would support Round River Conservation Studies’ work in San Juan County, Utah, to protect 2 million acres of fragile and culturally significant public land important to the Navajo people. Round River would work closely with, and provide support to, Dine Bikeyah, a Navajo group that has promoted the protection of large parts of the county. Together they are collaborating with San Juan County to develop a protection proposal all parties will support.
for the protection of Navajo cultural and wilderness values in San Juan County  
San Juan County in southeast Utah contains one million acres of some of the Colorado Plateau’s most fragile, ecologically diverse and culturally important land. This grant would support Round River Conservation Studies’ Navajo San Juan Conservation Initiative. The Initiative supports the Navajo people’s efforts to protect over one million acres of San Juan County’s wild and culturally significant land.

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