Showing posts with label PLI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PLI. Show all posts

Monday, November 21, 2016

Should Bears Ears be designated a national monument? Stanford: Bill Lane Center

Janet Wilcox San Juan County, Utah
Responding to Weighing the Future of Bears Ears Butte

Both Bill Crowder and Mark Meloy, criticize San Juan County for not having a viable solution for protecting public land; however, they did have a collaborative solution of what could be done. It was the San Juan County PLI-- not to be confused with the current version in Congress. And “No,” Josh Ewing, a national monument is not “the only practical way to protect this area.”
The San Juan County PLI group had worked for 3 years with all vested interests and differing views at the table, and they came up with a decision that was a workable compromise. At that time they were focusing on protecting the much smaller Cedar Mesa area, and a northern conservancy district. Even the Conservation Lands Foundation up through October 2014 was referring to the designation as “Cedar Mesa” as part of their “current campaign” (i.e. meaning dumping manpower and money into having that part of San Juan County designated as a National Monument.)
Then Brooke and Terry Tempest Williams held a soiree (the Saturday after Thanksgiving 2014) which Josh Ewing by the way, attended. Scott Groene from the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance asked Jonah how he felt about the north boundary being extended up through Canyonlands. “The more land the better”, Jonah said. “We are with you.” There a hand picked group of 12 “no negotiation” activists, orchestrated a unilateral change to the scope of what should be “protected.” Ms Williams clearly states in her book, “The Hour of Land, exactly how the evening played out, should you want more information on how that disastrous turn for the worse began.
In a letter Terry Tempest Williams wrote to Secretary Sally Jewell a few weeks later, Dec. 21, 2014, she describes a visit to Washington DC. and says, “The Navajo leadership returned home with a ‘perceived’ directive from the Department of the Interior to ‘disengage’ from a local, collaborative vision.” So don’t be blaming San Juan County leadership or citizens for lack of cooperation, or vision, or a desire to help protect this important landscape. When Jonah Yellowman agreed that the original designation should be expanded and blown up to 1.9 million acres (thus eventually renamed Bears Ears), this extreme environmental group felt free to “pillage and burn” state’s rights, local input, and the reputation of San Juan County citizens. We were high jacked, and made to look like the bad guy, by every environmental web site and lobby group in the nation. It has been yellow journalism at its best. I think it’s time that compromise be introduced back into your vocabulary and into the discussion.
11/21/16, 2:19pm

Thursday, September 29, 2016

Take the Time to Understand the PLI and the Congressional Process

Instead of watching a movie this week, take time to listen to the Utah PLI hearing.                           PLI Hearings September 2016

Overview of film: Rebecca Benally represented San Juan County well, and concisely presented the concerns and issues her constituents care about. Mr. Ure talked about Utah Trust lands, SITLA. Mr. Koontz represents Ride With Respect, out of Moab. The BLM was represented, The Nat'l Forest Service, and also the Ute tribe. All were given 5 minutes. 

The chairman effectively corners Ms.Lopez-Whiteskunk as she does not honestly explain the role of the coalition. The chairman, Mr. McClintock, also asked many good questions, yet kept the hearing moving in a timely manner. You will learn the names of many people that could/should be written to, who don't quite have the big picture of what a designation would mean -- Mr. Lowenthal and Mr. Kornze for instance. 

If you wish to read the 215 page document, here is the .pdf download link. http://robbishop.house.gov/uploadedfiles/utah_public_lands_initiative_act.pdf

Monday, August 1, 2016

Elmer Hurst--A No Monuments Man

July 20, 2016

Dear Madam Secretary Jewell,
My family owns 640 acres of deeded land 10 miles west of Bears Ears on Deer Flat. This lies in the Proposed National Monument.  It was a school section sold by highest bidder in the late 1940’s.  It took my father Dolores Hurst 25 years to improve and pay for that property, which has now been farmed for over 70 years.  His father was driven out of Mexico in 1912 and they settled in San Juan county, and befriended the Native American Navajos.  The Bears Ears Mountains have been a special place for us through all those years, where we all-- Navajo, Ute, and Anglo alike-- cut wood, hunted, and made lots of family memories. We’ve lived in harmony doing so. 

The history of land use always shows it is better maintained by those who are stake holders, who farm it, graze cattle, or live adjacent to it. No tourist is going to care like we do. To see this land taken over by people who don’t even live here, who don’t know the value of land or the hard work it takes to survive in a harsh landscape is disconcerting. They may own houses and cars, but have never worked for a living on the land.  All they know how to do is recreate. Through lying and deceit we are being backed into a corner where no negotiation is wanted and no on-going input will be sought.  The Federal government did not care enough to provide adequate staff to “protect” this area for the past 50 years, how do you think they will be able to finance the management 1.9 million acres in the future?
We have learned by sad experience that it is the nature and disposition of almost all men, as soon as they get a little authority, they will immediately begin to exercise unrighteous dominion.   This is a perfect example of what has happens with uncontrolled Federal power.  We support the County's PLI which allows for continued dialog and input from stake holders.
A Cold War Patriot,

Elmer Hurst

Friday, July 22, 2016

Escalante Native Speaks Against Another Monument

By Cassy Moon  July 21,  2016

[June 2017  Cassy and Justin Moon and their family have now moved to Richfield, but this past year she was one of the warrior women leading the the Bears Ears protest.  We will miss her valiant efforts and strong voice, but know she will continue to speak from afar.]


"Friends and family, we are in dire need of your support. Please take a few minutes to read my post, sign the petition, copy and paste the link to share and beg your friends to help. 

There are environmental groups vying for a national monument in our ever-so-desolate area. They are using the Native Americans as the main proponent of this proposal.  When I attended a meeting a few months ago and the Utah Navajo and Utah Utes in attendance asked for their "Anglo brothers and sisters" to help stop the creation of the monument, I felt I needed to become more than a loud voice and have been helping them. I don't want a monument in our area and neither do the majority of the locals. I should mention that it is 1.9 MILLION acres!  That is bigger than several states and would establish 93% of the land in the county with tougher federal regulations. The majority is already under BLM or Forest Service management.

I have several good reasons.  The first reason is that tourism, which will surely come, is not a sustainable economy. We are not like the areas of Hawaii, Orlando, Puerta Villarta, and San Francisco that are temperate so visitors come year round. As I have seen in the Escalante monument, tourism dies off in the winter months, so those workers are laid off and they starve.  People in that area ask for assistance from my church more in those months than any other time. The simple reality is the jobs go away, but the need for housing, fuel, food, utilities and other such bills are year round. The monument has created a welfare city for year-round dwellers. 

My second reason is if we popularize this area, the visitors will surely come. Visitors who do not believe the land is sacred as we do. Visitors who are not aware of cultural traditions and would roam through the ruins and perhaps take an ancient brick or scratch "Mary loves Johnny" on a rock. These visitors have been proven to be more of a detriment to national parks and monuments than locals. In fact, parks like Yosemite and Bryce Canyon are limiting cars in the area because of the congestion. Places like The Wave in Kane County allow only a few people a day into the park. 


As I have researched this topic, I have found in many environmental circles that people are calling for even more limits to already existing monuments. They are stating the facts of too much traffic, too many people going off of pathways and trails, too many people being insensitive to the landscape, traditions and cultures of the area, and even have gone so far to claim scenic flights have disturbed the birds. While I believe that these events are true, I can't help but think that popularizing an area only destroys an area, which leads to greater limitations and will lock even the locals out of the land. All because the actions of others. 

Take, for instance, the events in Yellowstone just this spring:  a man went off the path and fell into the boiling pots where his disintegrated body will never be recovers, the woman who animal-napped the very newborn buffalo calf because she felt it was too cold to survive (anyone with knowledge of rural areas or animals would know the mother would not accept the animal once it was touched by human scent--it was later euthanized by park rangers instead of keeping it alive on a reserve--my grandmother raised many abandoned calves and there is no way this animal had to have that fate), the men who ran through the mineral pools only to return to Canada and post it online (which led to no prosecution whatsoever) and the man who was caught in the mineral falls who was collecting water for medicinal purposes.  Unlike Yellowstone, our area doesn't receive the transient population. We really don't want that abuse in our area. 

We already know of limits that have been set for the Navajo tribe in Canyon de Chelly.  Navajo and Anglo alike are no longer allowed in the canyon without a guide, and even then the groups are limited. Keep in mind that the Navajo were originally promised rights to continue cultural practices in the canyon. The Navajo even appealed the Canyon designation many years ago, but were told no. The Havasupai and Walapai tribes of the Grand Canyon were told similar promises and they have been literally locked out of their cultural land.  One of my Navajo friends pointed me toward a quote by Red Cloud from many years ago.  He stated, "They made us many promises. Many of these promises I cannot remember.  They only kept one. They promised to take our land. And they did."

Thirdly, our area has many occupations that revolve around the land. From ranchers (cows are truly the best reseeders of nature), to a few mines (who are responsible in their practices), to oil and uranium industry. I would like all of you readers to know that nothing is done without government regulation in this land as it is. What is being asked for is that no economy happen as all need for regulation will be superseded by the monument. With that said, our school district will definitely struggle. Our tax valuation that provides our budget is based on roughly 20 companies. All but two are tied to the land. Even Verizon, which is a leading cellphone provider, is tied to the land. Where does the supply to make your technology come from?  With that said, if we don't have a stable economy that can provide jobs for families, our school budget will be greatly reduced, affecting over 3,000 children in the poorest county of the state.  Our children deserve every right to receive the supplies and quality of education of children in urban areas. A lower stable tax base revolving around just tourism will not do this. 

Our county has been heavily involved in a Public Lands Initiative that will not make either side of the argument happy, but it is a compromise. It seems that while many locals are willing to meet at the table and provide concessions in a better management and protection process that the environmentalists are not.  They are willing to use any means necessary, even to the abuse of non-local people to promote their wants in our land. A poignant example is when my Navajo friend asked a Ute woman from near Ute Mountain in Colorado to instead support a monument for Ute Mountian instead of his sacred Bears Ears, she was immediately angry and couldn't believe he would even suggest it. All I am asking you to do is click the link attached and help us fight the same way that the non-locals are. Please sign the petition. We need 100,000 signatures and we need them NOW!  https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/doodah-no-bears-ears-national-monument


P.S. Everything in the land is already federally managed. Nothing can be done without federal approval as it is already the majority of public land.  There really isn't a lumber business in the entire county as it has already been managed down to non-existent sales. The argument of protecting it from expansion of the population...one representative from SLC has stated that there will be strip mines, strip malls, and condos on the Bears Ears if it is not protected (and then he posted a picture of a swell in the mountains of somewhere decidedly NOT Bears Ears.  There was so much timber in those hills that I believe it was perhaps Oregon. 

There was the mining of uranium decades ago during the boom of national defense, but those mines are not in operation and they are not "just left abandoned". Many of the locals who know where those mines were have to point them out because they have been closed and reclaimed by the land. There is one active mine about 70 miles from Blanding, but it is not that large and the BLM had a 3 year hearing process that they just extended for another year (this process should be completed in three years per BLM regulations). As for the condos, people can't live where there isn't water.  Hence the reason that there is no community on Bears Ears already.  

The number one issue I have with this issue is not that it will protect the land, as I fiercely believe that wanton destruction is not good, but that people should be allowed to continue in the lifestyles they have created. Lifestyles that include wood gathering, pinion nuts and other foods, as well as medicinal herbs for the Native Americans. In my research, I have found that the call for further limiting the national monuments will happen. There is not a single national monument or park in the entire USA that can claim the promises and regulations made at the establishment of the said monument or park is the same as it was then. This is called the evolution of a monument or park.

 We can be told that everything will remain as it is now, but history will repeat itself as it has the past 100 years of the parks and monuments system. We of the area are not in love with the idea of destroying the land. We like our lives as they are now, which includes availability of all to visit the land...for free.  The national monuments I the area (Canyonlands, Natural Bridges, and Hovenweep) already have signs up that show they don't allow gathering.  We would like to be able to at least keep the same level of economy that our county, the poorest in the state, has now.  I know that several things will change if the monument happens, and these are based on fact.  Housing prices will skyrocket, yet tourism jobs that will morph from stable family jobs (because our economy will change) will not allow many of those employees to purchase the homes. They will rent or leave, much like Moab.  The area will be continually limited by sheer numbers of people, hence the further damage. 

We are finding in other parks that visitors are the ones doing the damage, yet the locals will pay for it with the increased regulation, yet the visitors will never truly be educated in how to behave in our area.  Look to Yellowstone just this spring for examples. These things are happening in Escalante as well.  In the 24th largest county in the USA, San Juan County cannot withstand the limitations that will surely follow as the government will decree 93% of the land in our boundaries as already existing national monument/park and new. The massive size of the proposed area even goes so far as to include our life-giving watershed. Secretary of Interior Sally Jewell seemed taken aback when that information came out in the meeting with commissioners. It seemed she was unaware of the repercussions of this action could bring. 

There are already what the BLM calls the "11 layers of protection" to protect this land. The problem is the underfunding to enforce it.  One more monument will further the funding issues because now more regulation will be needed as the masses will come. With that said, keep in mind that nothing with land-based business happens in this area without BLM, NPS, or Forest Service regulation and permission...right down to Commisioner Lyman's protest ride.  I have heard the audio recording of the conversation when Juan Palma gave permission. An audio recording that was withheld from evidence by Judge Shelby before it was discovered he should recuse himself from the case as he was close friends with Steven Bloch, SUWA's representative (these men were together as friends and family several times a week).  Of course, I have a distrust that our government can keep the promises being made in this monument proposition. There are too many previous broken promises and too much collaboration behind closed doors unsettles me."          Cassy Moon