Raise Your Voice: Protect the Arctic Refuge by Writing a Letter to the Editor (LTE)

Photo Credit: Paxson Woelber

Writing a Letter to the Editor (LTE) for your local or regional newspaper is one of the most effective ways to share your message with a wide audience. With the current threats to our environment, this tool is more crucial than ever for organizing and advocacy. Opinion pages, where LTEs are published, are among the most widely read sections of newspapers and news websites. Even more importantly, members of Congress and their staff closely monitor these pages to gauge the concerns and priorities of their constituents.

Why Now?

With the release of the House budget reconciliation bill that includes leasing for oil and gas in the Arctic Refuge it is clear - congress and the administration need to hear from people across the country about the risks of drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. By submitting an LTE, you can help spotlight this critical issue and show lawmakers that Americans are paying attention.

ACT TODAY: Write an LTE to make it clear that drilling in the Arctic Refuge is a financial failure and an environmental disaster. Let’s remind Congress that millions of Americans stand against this reckless plan.


The Truth About Arctic Refuge Drilling

In 2017, the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge was opened for oil and gas development as part of Trump’s Tax Act, under the guise of reducing the federal deficit. This legislation mandated two lease sales, initially projected to generate $1.8 billion. However, the first sale fell dramatically short, raising just 1% of the promised revenue. The Department of the Interior canceled the second lease sale after it received no bids from oil and gas companies - at all. These unrealistic budget estimates have now been tested twice, and the results are undeniable: the American public was lied to.


Reconciliation Bill is a Billionaire Land Grab that Sacrifices Alaska

The release of House Natural Resource’s budget reconciliation bill reveals provisions that would dramatically expand oil and gas development in Alaska’s Arctic regions while limiting environmental review and restricting judicial oversight.

“Alaska’s public lands and waters are directly in the crosshairs of a desperate attempt by Congress to pay for Trump’s billionaire tax cuts,” said Kristen Miller, Executive Director of Alaska Wilderness League. “This dangerous legislation would greenlight drilling in the heart of the Arctic Refuge, silence the voices of Indigenous communities and the American public, and slam the courthouse doors shut for anyone who dares to speak out. This isn’t responsible energy policy—it’s an unchecked handout to corporations at the expense of one of our nation’s last truly wild places. We will fight back.”


Take Action: The World Is Watching

It’s time to put Congress on notice. Drilling in the Arctic Refuge is financially unnecessary, reckless, and opposed by millions of Americans. Republicans in Congresss are trying to insert Arctic Refuge drilling into the budget reconciliation process once again - now is the time to put them on notice!

Your voice matters. Write an LTE today to urge Congress to protect this irreplaceable landscape and ensure that future generations inherit a planet where such unique ecosystems still exist. Use our talking points and sample LTE below to get started, or craft your own letter infused with your passion and personal experiences. Together, we can make a difference.


Sample letters:

Option 1: Zero Bids, Zero Sense: Time to Protect the Arctic Refuge
Word Count: 230

The cancellation of the last Arctic National Wildlife Refuge lease sale due to zero bids from oil and gas companies underscores a simple truth: Arctic drilling is a financial dead end.

Promised as a $1.8 billion economic boon under Trump’s 2017 Tax Act, Arctic leases have repeatedly failed, exposing a lie sold to Americans under the pretense of deficit reduction. Investors, companies, and the public are turning away from high-cost, high-risk projects like Arctic drilling. But Congress is stuck in the stone age, again pushing pro-drilling rhetoric by including more Arctic Refuge lease sales in the just released budget reconciliation bill.

The Arctic Refuge is where caribou birth their calves, polar bears den, and millions of migratory birds return to nest each year. This is the cultural homeland of the Gwich’in Nation, and it deserves the strongest possible protection. On top of that the climate crisis is hitting home for all of us. Fires, droughts, floods, the recent wall of tornadoes, these bigger, stronger storms are impacting communities across the nation. Drilling in the Arctic would not only exacerbate the crisis already at our doorsteps but it would put at risk one of the most spectacular intact ecosystems on Earth.

Instead of clinging to outdated fossil fuel projects, we must prioritize clean energy. Protecting the Arctic Refuge isn’t just about conservation—it’s about ensuring a thriving, resilient future for all.

Option 2: Moment of Truth: Time to Protect the Arctic Refuge
Word Count: 223

Out of touch politicians just released text for their budget bill, which mandates 4 lease sales in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and sales every 2 years in the Western Arctic (NPR-A). Even more alarmingly, it attempts to allow oil and gas corporations to sidestep essential environmental protections and tries to eliminate judicial oversight, putting wildlife, subsistence livelihoods, and climate stability at grave risk.

It’s a well-known fact that drilling in the fragile, irreplaceable Arctic landscape is a bad business decision. We’ve been here before and know that Arctic Refuge leases raised less than 1% of what was promised to offset massive tax cuts for the ultra-wealthy. Instead of finding real budget solutions, once again congress is trying to sell off our public lands to benefit the few.

These Arctic public lands are relied on by the Gwich’in and Iñupiaq indigenous communities and countless species of precious wildlife, including polar bears, caribou, whales, and migratory birds. Instead of clinging to outdated fossil fuel projects I urge Rep. XXX and all members of congress to stand up to these threats to public lands, Indigenous peoples, wildlife, and our climate to ensure that the irreplaceable Arctic is not for sale in the budget bill.

Protecting the Arctic Refuge isn’t just about conservation—it’s about ensuring a thriving, resilient future for all.

Additional background and talking points:
PLACES WE PROTECT: Arctic National Wildlife Refuge

• The Arctic Refuge is home to iconic species like polar bears and caribou. These habitats are irreplaceable.
• Drilling risks catastrophic oil spills in one of the most extreme environments on Earth.
• Companies are already struggling with melting permafrost in the Arctic—an ominous sign of the Arctic’s fragility.
• The target area for the lease sale is known as the "biological heart" of the Arctic Refuge, the Coastal Plain is critical for polar bears, and migratory birds, and serves as the calving grounds for the Porcupine Caribou Herd. It holds profound cultural significance for the Gwich’in people, who call it Iizhik Gwats'an Gwandaii Goodlit (The Sacred Place Where Life Begins.)
• The first Arctic Refuge lease sale in 2021 was a disaster, generating less than 1% of promised revenue. Major oil companies largely stayed away, and the few corporations that did show up to bid in the lease sale later chose to pay millions of dollars to exit their leases or had them revoked by the Biden administration.
• There is widespread opposition: Gwich’in Nation and Iñupiat allies, environmental organizations, and millions of Americans oppose drilling in the Arctic Refuge. The risks to culture, biodiversity, and the climate are far too great.
• The refuge’s 19.6 million acres are home to an abundance of wildlife—musk oxen, wolves, caribou, and polar bears—and are the summer breeding grounds for millions of birds that migrate here from six continents and all 50 states. Its lands and waterways are also vital to the Gwich’in and other local Indigenous communities who have relied on these rich ecosystems for millennia. The debate over what to do with this landscape has raged for nearly a century, but now, in the midst of a climate crisis that’s wreaking havoc at every latitude but warming the poles at astonishing rates, there’s broad consensus that drilling the Arctic for fossil fuels is beyond a terrible idea.


Follow these tips:

  1. Respond to an article in the paper.
  2. Follow the paper’s directions. The best letters are those that are in response to an article that ran in the paper, and many papers require that you reference the specific article. Begin your letter by citing the original story by name, date and author. Some papers do occasionally print LTEs because of a lack of coverage on a specific issue. If this is the case, begin your LTE by stating your concern that the paper hasn't focused on this important issue.
  3. Share your expertise. Information on how and to whom to submit a letter-to-the-editor is usually found right on the letters page in your paper. Follow these guidelines to increase the likelihood that your letter will be printed.If you have relevant qualifications to the topic you're addressing, be sure to include that in your submission.
  4. Refer to the legislator or corporation you are trying to influence by name. If your letter includes a legislator’s name, in almost all cases staff will give him or her the letter to read personally.
  5. Write the letter in your own words. Editors want letters in their papers to be original. Feel free to use our messaging tips, but also take the time to write the letter in your own words.
  6. Keep your letter short, focused and interesting. In general, letters should be under 200 words — often 150 or less is best. Stay focused on one (or, at the most, two) main point(s) and get to it in the first two sentences. If possible, include interesting facts, relevant personal experience, and any local connections to the issue that you may have.
  7.  Include your contact information. Be sure to include your name, address, and a daytime phone number. The paper will contact you before printing your letter.

Questions?

If you are interested in writing and submitting an LTE or have a question, contact Lois (at) AlaskaWild.org. If you send in an LTE, we'd love to hear about it so that we can keep an eye out for it. Or better yet, let us know when you get published!