Saturday, March 24, 2018

~~BEAR ESSENTIALS: March 24, 2018~~

* Meet March 26 to give Input on Management of Bears Ears

          Write to the BLM by April 11 (follow link above)

* Utah DOGM Preserves Mining History


* Zinke Focused on Draining DOI Swamp

“Zinke proposed reorganizing his department giving more authority to regional offices. His reasoning was that managers with their feet on the ground have the most knowledge of their resources in order to foster multiple use management, the mission of the Department of Interior.”

v  Get Ready for the First Bar-B-Q of Spring  Vegan humor



“March 4, we heard Congressman Gosar’s response to several subjects that included Clean, Drain & Dry, the 2nd Amendment, Buffalo in the Grand Canyon, the quandary of Feral Burros and Horses, the destruction of the desert southwest because of illegal immigrants and much, much more.”



                Other Articles/ Events of Local Interest
v Pipe Line Is Not Worth the Cost  Opinion/Josh Warburton
v Contact for 3rd District Representative:  John Curtis https://curtis.house.gov/contact/email
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v Strange but True San Juan Connections

v Bluff Founders Day Schedule Attached                 

 http://beyondthebears.blogspot.com/          
                     Documenting Bears Ears “No Monument” efforts since July 2016                                                                     

Sunday, March 18, 2018

San Juan Hill is Sacred to Many San Juan Residents

                     “A people without the knowledge of their past history, origin and culture
is like a tree without roots.”        Marcus Garvey

                                                                                                                    
There have been many fear mongers who have tried to drive a wedge between stake- holders concerning Bears Ears National Monument.  I greatly appreciate that local agencies are giving all county residents this opportunity to respond and hope you will both listen and read carefully and respond accordingly.
Over 35 years ago, I helped to prepare several annual reports for Utah Navajo Development Council (UNDC).  As I worked with that agency, one philosophy that stood out dramatically, was their mantra: “Those most directly affected by decisions, should have a say in those decisions.”  I believe that is a wise and productive philosophy in managing families, businesses, and public lands.
I recognize that public lands should be available to the public, but I do believe that local residents living adjacent to the lands affected, should have a decidedly stronger influence on policies.  We live here; we are impacted regularly, (for some daily) by government decisions.  Ours is not a seasonal visit, or a well-funded campaign that entices tourists to come.  We love and care about San Juan County, every day in multiple ways.
 For this reason, policies that affect livelihood and landscape must protect the rights of citizens in those counties and states.  State sovereignty must be protected, or we become a colony to an overreaching federal government, which early patriots warned about over 240 years ago. Monuments should never be used as a tool by environmental special interests to prohibit traditional activities such as mining, grazing, farming, off-roading, hunting, water storage, or other forms of economic development within the counties.
One of my concerns is that “sacred lands” must be available to those who hold them sacred. This applies to both Native and Anglo people of San Juan County.  As these groups strive to preserve their culture and heritage, they need to have access to those sacred sites. I have helped to collect, write and publish San Juan County history for over 30 years (Blue Mountain Shadows), and I am particularly passionate about passing on the torch of understanding and appreciation of culture and history to the next generation – of both Anglo and Native alike.  We must give the current, and future generations “roots” if the valuable lessons of the past are to continue.

One such “sacred site” is San Juan Hill, the last, and almost insurmountable obstacle to the original Hole in the Rock caravan of 1880. In order to perpetuate and preserve the significance of that pioneering expedition, there is no better teacher than experiencing the difficulty and dedication of those long-suffering pioneers. For that reason, youth groups must be afforded those valuable experiences that cannot be replicated through books.  They must experience hardships, if they are ever to learn they can do hard things.   I urge you to treat all San Juan County cultures with equity and validation, and allow them opportunities to learn, understand, and perpetuate their valued history and culture in these national monuments.

Saturday, March 10, 2018

~~BEAR ESSENTIALS: March 10, 2018~~


*March 14 Wallace Stegner Center Symposium:

A few of the Red Flag topics and presenters: The Dynamic West: Economic & Demographic Change
Ray Rasker
, Headwaters Economics; 12:50 p.m.
Thursday: 12:30 Utah’s Monumental Controversy: Revisiting the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument
John Ruple, University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law (Moderator)
Steve Bloch, Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance
Constance E. Brooks, C.E. Brooks & Associates, P.C.
Nicole Croft, Grand Staircase Escalante Partners
2:45 p.m. – Sage Grouse Conservation: The Challenge of Multi-Jurisdictional Planning

    *Who Speaks for the Colorado Plateau? High Country News
Is “the role of environmental groups is to save the Colo; Plateau FROM
the people who live there?"
(Vint DeGraw has posted several clarifications in San Juan Political Debate: Scroll)
*Stay in Contact with 3rd District Representative:  John Curtis  https://curtis.house.gov/contact/email


"Grazing allotments in the monuments are not just land, they are the linchpin of the Western ranching community. The Farm Bureaus’ member ranching families manage the natural resources on these lands for both their livelihood and wildlife."
Zinke’s page is a good FB site to follow, as there is much going on in DOI, and lots of opinions.
n  BLM Should Move West  Nevada Appeal
n  Top Stories of 2017 in the Four Corners  Four Corners Free Press

  

“These days, [The Dept. of] Interior spends over $200 million a year buying land. That raises the perennial question: how much is enough? The government already owns 635 million acres, almost a third of the United States. That includes 250 million acres of BLM, 193 million acres of national forests, 84 million acres of national parks, and 150 million acres of wildlife refuges. And as the maintenance backlog demonstrates, the government cannot begin to manage it all.” 

Other Articles/ Events of Local Interest

                                                                 ~~~~~~                                        
 http://beyondthebears.blogspot.com/          
                        Documenting Bears Ears “No Monument” efforts since July 2016