In taking three years to craft their blueprint for how public lands should be managed across a large portion of Utah, U.S. Reps. Rob Bishop and Jason Chaffetz have produced a smoke-and-mirrors view of conservation, one that uses the right language but disguises their true goals in obfuscation and fine print.
But then, the two Republicans from Utah hinted, during a public unveiling of the plan last week, at their true motivations. Rep. Bishop, who chairs the House Natural Resources Committee that will surely pass through the bill on a strict party-line vote, admitted that he was "never a fan of creating more wilderness in the first place," while Rep. Chaffetz mentioned his love for off-road vehicles.
Thus it can be understood why the 41 proposed wilderness areas touted in the 65-page "discussion draft" would be open to state agencies using aircraft and "mechanized equipment" in managing wildlife and fisheries, and that the continued use of "fences, line cabins, water wells and pipelines, stock tanks and ponds" would be OK.
So, apparently, it would be alright for the state to use aircraft to shoot predators in a bid to bolster populations of prey for human hunters, as does Alaska's Department of Fish and Game. The difference, of course, is that this legislation would allow the practice to be used over wilderness areas, not only on lands adjacent to them.
Too, the politicians wrote that these wilderness areas, if officially designated, would not be off-limits for the construction "of new improvements or replacement of deteriorated facilities," nor the "use of motorized equipment for emergency purposes such as rescuing sick animals or the placement of feed in emergency situations is permissible."
Motorized access to these proposed wilderness areas would be permissable under certain, open-ended, restrictions:
Nothing in this Act shall be construed to limit motorized access and road maintenance by local municipalities and other water right holders for those maintenance activities necessary to guarantee the continued viability of water resource facilities that currently exist or which may be necessary in the future to prevent the degradation of the water supply in wilderness areas...
In other words, Reps. Bishop and Chaffetz would rewrite The Wilderness Act, which interprets official wilderness as “an area where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man, where man himself is a visitor who does not remain."
They also would block future wilderness designation in the state by "releasing" other Bureau of Land Management acreage that had been placed under study for official wilderness designation.
Utah politicians long have been at the forefront of efforts to force the federal government to cede public lands back to the state, and while that effort is continuing, Reps. Bishop and Chaffetz aim to help move it along by turning over tens of thousands of acres of federal lands to the state through their legislation.
The measure would require the BLM, "without consideration," to transfer nearly 10,000 acres of land it manages to the state of Utah for addition to Goblin Valley State Park. Another land transfer from the BLM to the state would help create the Price Canyon State Forest, the first state forest in Utah. Another 21 land conveyances from the federal government to the state of Utah, without any consideration in return, also are called for by the legislation. Those range from just 1 acre at the resort town of Park City to 15,379 acres at the Dugout Ranch northwest of Monticello to Utah State University.
It shouldn't go unnoticed that this legislation came but a week after the release of a poll of 2,800 people across Wyoming, Colorado, Nevada, Utah, New Mexico, Arizona, and Montana that concluded that Westerners value conservation and see economic returns from national parks, national forests, and national monuments in their states, and don't believe it's in their best interests to have federal lands transferred to the states.
"The (Public Lands Initiative) furthers the land grab agenda by giving away federal lands. As drafted, the PLI grants thousands of miles of rights-of-way to the state and counties to convert cow trails, footpaths, and seldom-used dirt tracks into highways," states the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance in denouncing the Bishop-Chaffetz plan. "The PLI then allows the counties and the states to seek, through litigation, additional right-of-way claims in the wilderness areas it designates. The PLI includes a land exchange where the state gives up land with low market values in exchange for more land with a higher market value—yes, you read that right, the state would make out like a bandit. The PLI also gives away tens of thousands of acres of federal land to the state and counties for all kinds of pet projects."
And the loopholes and giveaways continue throughout the legislation:
* The creation of National Conservation Areas under the legislation does not guarantee water rights for those NCAs, and grazing could continue, and possibly increase, in these areas under the bill's provisions.
* No doubt with an eye toward Utah's energy sector, which has generated high ozone levels in some areas of the state, most notably in the Uinta Basin of eastern Utah, the proposed wilderness areas (including those proposed for Arches and Canyonlands national parks and Dinosaur National Monument) would not be designated as Class 1 airsheds, as nearly 160 other wilderness areas across the country are, to protect the viewsheds. "As currently drafted, the PLI would actually weaken airshed protections for nearly all of Arches and Canyonlands national park," notes SUWA officials
* The measure tosses out an oil and gas leasing reform plan adopted by the BLM in 2010.
This legislation is the new face of the Sagebrush Rebellion of the 1970s and '80s, a political maneuver with a bottomline: handcuff the federal government from properly managing its domain if the land can't be transferred to the states.
While Utah Gov. Gary Herbert praised the bill as the "fourth largest conservation bill in history," that's a misnomer. It's a bait-and-switch to take protections for land, water and wildlife long provided by The Wilderness Act and Environmental Protection Agency down a notch or two. It would give away federal lands owned by all Americans. It would deny outright potential wilderness designations without having a fair public hearing before the owners of those lands -- the American public. For Rep. Rob Bishop, who long has accused presidents of wielding the Antiquities Act without involving the public, these measures smack of hypocrisy.
Across the nation just 5 percent of the landscape is protected as official wilderness, according to Wilderness.net, and 2.7 percent of that total is in Alaska. This legislation, along with watering down the meaning of "wilderness designation,'" would toss away thousands of acres of spectacular landscapes that should be preserved for future generations to marvel at, fuel energy development regardless of associated emissions, and hamstring federal agencies in managing the federal domain for all.
Is this true "conservation"?
Manifest Destiny long ago swept across the West, to the extreme in many places. What is needed is a truer interpretation, and determination, for conservation, a resolve that protects and preserves our waning wilderness quality lands, which better stewards our national parks. This bill falls short on all points.
Comments
What irony to see someone pontificate about the devastation wrought by stock on public lands who makes videos promoting the use of llama trains to "stock" a private lodge in the Smokies.
Thank you for my daily share, gary. We are thoroughly amused.
Apples and oranges, John Quillen. The llamas are not allowed to graze on park vegetation, and do very little to any damage on the trail. Llamas and horses are also allowed for transport in wilderness areas as stated by rules and regulations within the wilderness act. Not that the wilderness act applies in the Smokies, but they still follow similar guidlines Horses and llamas are also corraled to designated trails, and not allowed to roam willy nilly through the park, like cattle are allowed on BLM land. So if anyone is completely clueless in this case, it would be you. And whose the "we", other than the mulitple voices that must be residing in your thick skull?
You would really do yourself some justice if you understood the rules and regulations before you spoted off like a know-it-all, because it just makes you look like a simple-minded fool in almost every thing you say and do.
http://www.sltrib.com/news/3476561-155/rolly-videos-claim-that-blm-sparked
The article mentions Utah legislator Ken Ivory, a member of a very prominent land development family in the state who is also a leader in the thrust to "take back" federal lands in the west. Ivory, like a few others, has found these efforts to be quite profitable. Quotes from the article:
"Ivory, R-West Jordan, was a co-founder and CEO of the American Lands Council, to which 47 counties in Western states spent a combined $219,000 of taxpayer money in 2014 to be members, according to the Center for Western Priorities.
. . . . .
Ivory has taken an annual salary from the ALC, which has grown to more than $100,000. His wife also is paid as the organization's communications director.
A Utah legislative committee has approved $14 million to pay for a lawsuit to transfer control of 31 million acres from the feds to the state."
Just when you think it can't become any smellier . . . .
http://www.sltrib.com/news/3487535-155/state-paid-640k-for-public-lands
From the article:
Utah taxpayers paid lawyers, a polling firm, a research group and lobbyists nearly $640,000 to prepare a legal analysis on a potential lawsuit seeking state ownership of federal lands, invoices show.
But lawyers hired by the commission are refusing to provide Dabakis with the information he wants, contending they represent the chairmen of the commission -- not the entire commission -- and need permission before giving Dabakis the information he seeks, which is protected by the attorney-client privilege.
Dabakis and Briscoe have been given invoices documenting $639,436 spent preparing the legal brief -- that after a discount of about $53,000.
Attorneys on the team were charging the commission up to $500 an hour for their work, and they billed thousands of dollars in travel and other expenses, including nearly $3,200 for a video with the Heritage Foundation.
http://www.sltrib.com/opinion/3487461-155/bagley-cartoon-who-elected-amm...
http://www.sltrib.com/news/3495055-155/utahs-ken-ivory-recruiting-leader...
Thank goodness we still have some newspapers willing to keep any eye on things like this for us.