Showing posts with label Chilcoat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chilcoat. Show all posts

Sunday, April 14, 2019

Spring has Sprung --so has the Threat of More Lawsuits; Is Negotiation a Foreign Language?

News in the West

Opposed to Increase in Bears Ears Acreage?  Sign Petition

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Despite Harsh Winter, Deer Herd Survival is good in Utah

(Article lists hunting permits recommended for 2019 hunts)
Kammy Palmer Photo, Blue Mt. Shadows

Mesa Verde Begins Wild Horse Removal


"The National Popular Vote bill, which Gov. Jared Polis signed into law March 15, would grant all of Colorado’s presidential votes to the winner of the popular vote, part of a nationwide movement to ensure that future presidents cannot be elected based on the Electoral College. Although the bill would go into effect only if enough states sign on, the bill still passed easily through the House and Senate, despite objections from rural Colorado."

Pros and Cons of Signing Conservation Easements and Land Trusts


Embezzlement at Ute Mt. Casino

"After a 3-year investigation into the embezzlement of funds from the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe, 16 defendants have been convicted and sentenced for their illegal conduct to include each defendant participating in taking a substantial amount of money from the tribe that was not due to them"

Lime Ridge Cattlegate Case Closed

.....and then this 

New Lime Ridge Cattlegate Case Begins with Law Suit


On-Line Auction to Raise Money for Laws Court Appeal 
~~ April 17-23 noon; 
check e-mail for messages!



"Legislation essential to implementing drought contingency plans in the Colorado River Basin has passed in Congress with a swiftness more commonly found in the currents of Class 5 rapids than in Washington, D.C., thanks in part to the help of Colorado's two U.S. senators. The Colorado River Drought Contingency Plan Authorization Act needs only the signature of President Trump to become law following its passage by Congress just six days after its introduction in the Senate."

~~Video overview of San Juan County News  Editor Bill Boyle, San Juan Record


~~ Blanding Mayor Supports Five Member Commission:

"For no less than 30 years I have been a proponent of a Five Member County Commission. I suggested it as an alternative in the hearings on redistricting. I asked the County Commission to place the question on the ballot for 2018 and they declined I believe now is the time to act. The recent attention given to the districts has created a more educated electorate. Now, more than at any previous time I believe the people are prepared to make an educated choice for the future of their county.
There are a number of reasons a Five Member County Commission makes sense. Primary among these is that it provides a greater voice to the people. It does this in numerous ways among which are:
1: Share The Load. Five members share the workload more effectively than three. This may give more time to any individual commissioner to spend on specific issues of concern. Also, it may help to prevent council members from becoming overworked, burned out and less effective. We have an enormous county. There is plenty of work to go around.
2: Better Decisions. More people involved in the discussion almost always leads to better ideas because there is more variety of opinion, experience and expertise. At times more voices on council can make decisions more difficult or the council less responsive. However, most towns, cities and counties run just fine with a five member commission/council. I maintain that if the discussion doesn’t clearly identify the best solution on an issue then more time and a more deliberate approach should be taken. Sometimes, especially in government, slower is better.
3: Share The Power. A five member commission shares the power and the attendant responsibility and liability with more people. In this case there is certainly safety in numbers. Safety for the commission as more people share in the decisions being made and more safety for the citizens against possible abuse of power.
4: More Responsive. Even though every commission member represents the entire county it has been decided we will have districts. Five districts puts each representative closer geographically, and likely more in tune, with the citizens in their district. This is in turn makes them more accessible to the citizens and more understanding and responsive to their needs and opinions.
5: Open Meetings Compliance. There has been debate in the Utah legislature to either relax or tighten up on three member commission compliance with the Open Meetings Act. Under current law any two commissioners or council members constitute a quorum and may violate, or appear to violate, the act with many of their conversations. These conversations, when they are in the spirit of the Open Meetings Act, facilitate good governance and can happen legally with a five member commission.
6: Restore Representation for Blanding. Since I originally published this paper decisions by a federal judge have stripped Blanding of representation as a legally protected ‘community of interest’. A five member commission restores this representation as explained in #4 above.
There is a petition in circulation for the registered voters of San Juan County to exercise their right of self governance and place a question on the ballot in November. The question is simply whether a committee should be formed to study the possibility of changing our form of government. We will vote on whether to study the issue and vote again on any proposed solution. All voices will have ample time to be heard as the citizens of San Juan County consider and debate this important question.
I encourage everyone to support the formation of a study committee by voting in favor of the question. But first, we need signatures to get the question of the ballot. We have a natural right to petition which is protected by the First Amendment to the Constitution. Let’s exercise that right. Please sign the petition. Anyone who would like to sign or help gather signatures please contact the petition sponsor closest to you: Suzette Morris - Aneth and Montezuma Creek, Wendy Walker Tibbetts - Spanish Valley and LaSal, Alex Bitsinnie - Navajo Mtn and Monument Valley, Tim Young - Monticello, Joe B Lyman - Blanding and anywhere in the county." Mayor Joe B. Lyman




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~~New Lime Ridge Cattlegate Case Files Frivolous Law Suit



~~Boos Generated Resolutions Create Rift in SJC Commission Meeting


~~ Industrial Strength Tourism also Kills the Environment

"…we kill off the traditional industries that supported western towns, replacing them with the tourism that beautiful places attract when promoted. Then decide we’re loving these places to death, so they must be closed to tourists, too..."
The Swiss businessman and philanthropist Hansjörg Wyss, the US-based founder of the Synthes medical technology group, plans to give the huge donation (1 Billion) to help better protect wildlife areas. 
In an open letterexternal link published on Wednesday (Nov. 2018) in the New York Times, the 83-year-old said the money would be released over the next ten years. The Wyss Foundationexternal link will direct funds to efforts aimed at creating protected areas for wildlife and improving management of existing ones. The goal of the foundation is to keep about 30% of the earth in its natural state until 2030. 

~~ Animal Rights Over Human Needs: Wyss Funding 

"Causes supported by Wyss include radical environmentalism. In Montana, his foundation backs groups against energy and growth development disguised as hunting and wildlife enthusiasts. There’s a lot of overlap between HSUS’s animal liberation agenda and radical environmentalism—such as anti-hunting sentiments."

~~Illegal Activities at Calif. Ecological Reserve


~~California's Restricted Water Supply Used for Raising Saudi Alfalfa


Saturday, April 6, 2019

More Collusion and Conflict: Bear Essentials 4/6/2019

What's New in the West

The County Seat: Exploring other forms of County Government


Despicable Behavior Revisited: Division, Demos and the 2020 Elections

"Ironically perhaps, former San Juan County Commissioner Benally also was systematically defamed over roughly the same period. She ran afoul of an insular, male-dominated county Democratic Party apparatus and its single-issue allies — the same kind of structural “patriarchy” many of Miller’s feminist critics believe he represents. Yet Benally found no support among progressives based in Salt Lake City; instead she found well-organized opponents.
That’s not surprising. Benally criticized designation of Bears Ears National Monument; she collaborated with high-ranking Republicans; she didn’t trust the federal government because of its dismal historical record on Native American affairs; and she had ideological disagreements with the party about the importance of local control over county governance and management of public lands. Specifically, she said publicly that:
  • Converting sacred lands to a monument will ultimately be controlled by “bureaucrats unfamiliar with Navajo history and traditional ways.”
  • The federal government has broken promises of trust responsibilities and formal treaties again and again and again for the past 200 years.
  • Promises related to creation of jobs managing the monument are not guaranteed.
  • The federal government’s history of managing national monuments on sacred lands has been inconsistent, even disastrous.
  • Groups outside of San Juan County — deep-pocketed environmental groups — should not be able to dictate the future of the region’s lands or pretend to speak for Navajos."  
  •  Bill Keshlear, Canyon Zephyr  4/1/ 2019

Audio Recording of SJC Work Meeting 4/2/19

Excessive Resolutions, Rebuffs, and best Remedies:  Will they listen?

Audio Recording of SJ Commission Meeting 4/2/19

SJ County Attorney Kendall Laws Explains his Paper Trail of
Communication with Commissioners and Concerns about Lawsuit 4/2/19




~~ April 2 San Juan Commission Meeting Recording



Stand United Petition: Opposes Expansion of Bears Ears  (sign on-line)




~~ Boos Conspiracy Plot to Remove SJ County Prosecutor


~~ Dispersed Camping Takes Toll on Public Lands Near Moab

"These public lands, sandwiched between U.S. 191 and Arches National Park, remain premier places to ride and view dinosaur tracks, but dispersed camping has taken a serious toll on the land and degraded the visitor experience.
Campers drive over soft soils in search of sites to pitch a tent, flatten vegetation, and leave behind mounds of fetid waste, according to the Bureau of Land Management’s environmental assessment of a proposal to consolidate dispersed camping into designated sites." Maffley

~~ Court Pressures Phil Lyman to Increase Monthly Restitution Fee

"The back-and-forth follows a request by the U.S. attorney’s office that Lyman be ordered to increase his monthly payments from $100 to $500 toward some $96,000 in outstanding restitution stemming from his misdemeanor conviction in 2015 for leading a protest ride on ATVs through Utah’s Recapture Canyon."


Chilcoat and Franklin Charges Settled Out of Court 

Friday, December 14, 2018

Cows Not Condos! ~~Bear Essentials~~ Dec. 6-14, 2018


Christmas Gift Ideas

The San Juan Record has many books

 and even the newest National Geographic

 with articles/ history of Bears Ears.  

Past issues of Blue Mountain Shadows 

also sold there as well as in many 

Blanding Locations.










~~Jim Carlson: Reforming Administrative Government

~~Landowner Wants out of Bluff City Incorporation

~~Read and Support the Canyon Zephyr

~~Boulder Rancher uses Cows to Protest Tourism

~~ Read and Support: Free Range Report















~~More National Parks Needed; Bring on the Tourists Opinion SLT

~~Interior Dept. Inspector General Confirms Abuses by BLM employees

~~Lawsuits, Legislation, and Land Use since Bears Ears/ Grand Staircase were Downsized --KSL

~~Malheur Ranchers Given a Week to Respond to 'Fishy' Forest Service Report
"For example, federal agencies have developed their environmental data about steelhead populations by studying areas where fish are unlikely to travel, such as upstream of multiple “check dams” installed by the Forest Service to slow water flow, Stout said.
Though ranchers aren’t responsible for the problem, grazing cattle nonetheless get the blame, he said. If you go against their agenda, you’re demonized,” he said."
~~Mark Franklin and Rose Chilcoat Claim They Were Kidnapped   --"In another bizarre turn of events last week, Franklin’s team filed a complaint with the San Juan County Prosecutors Office claiming Mark Franklin and Rose Chilcoat were kidnapped by Zeb Dalton and Zane Odell when they detained them at the scene of the crime in 2017.

~~Friends of Cedar Mesa Involved in Self Appointed Road Closure
"Last week Josh Nielson of Blanding, Utah was out with a client in the Butler Wash / Comb Ridge area when he came across a group of folks building barricades across a couple of county roads. One of the roads was county road D2138 which was not closed. . . The fact that FCM, who purport to be “environmentalists,” are dragging logs, rocks, digging up sand and dirt to create these barricades without an environmental impact study, should cause great concern for the BLM. The transference and damage to artifacts as well as damage to the macrobiotic soil (Cryptobiotic soil crust), plants, and the area in general should warrant a criminal investigation to say the least by the Bureau of Land Management."  The Petroglyph Dec. 5

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Political Ponderings:

Quotes from Thomas Jefferson

~~"The democracy will cease to exist when you take away from those  who are willing to work and give to those who would not.-- TJ

~~"It is incumbent on every generation  to pay its own debts as it goes. A principle which if acted on, would save one-half the wars of the world."  --TJ

~~"I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people, under the pretense of taking care of them."--TJ

~~"My reading of history convinces me that most bad government results from too much government."TJ

 ~~"The strongest reason for the people to retain the right to keep and bear arms is, as a last resort, to protect themselves against tyranny in government." --TJ

~~"To compel a man to subsidize with his taxes, the propagation of ideas which he disbelieves and abhors, is sinful and tyrannical.--TJ   

Friday, July 20, 2018

~~BEAR ESSENTIALS: July 20, 2018~~

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v Attention Ranchers with Grazing Allotments:
Ranchers who maintain grazing allotments in the footprint of the previous Bears Ears National Monument or the new monuments, need to know about Rangeland Strategies. As the BLM and USFS update their management plans for these areas, we believe our consultants can help make sure that the interests of those with grazing allotments are protected.  (Benjamin Burr)  More information
             State Senator David Hinkins. a Great Defender of San Juan County
n  Diamond Rio will headline the San Juan County Fair with a performance on Thursday, August 9 beginning at 7:30 p.m. at the San Juan County Fairgrounds.

Advance tickets are $18 and can be purchased at BCL Distributing in Blanding (1261 South Main) or the San Juan Record in Monticello (49 South Main).


--Did the State AG’s Office side with the defendants?
--Why did the AG’s Office bring unfounded charges against the lead deputy in the Chilcoat case just prior to the preliminary hearing?
--Why is it that the AG’s Office refused to assist the San Juan County Prosecutor due to a “conflict of interest,” and then agree to participate in the appeals hearing where all charges are dropped against Chilcoat, who is the client of an AG’s Office employee?  --Monte Wells

n  LA Times: Bears Ears Awaits Ruling
n  Woman Treed by Wolves; Rescue Delayed
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n Read Past Editions of Bear Essentials at: http://beyondthebears.blogspot.com/
Documenting Bears Ears Controversy and Public Land Issues since July 2016