Trump Sued for Slicing Up National Monuments

Bears Ears
Ancient homes in Bears Ears National Monument (Photo courtesy Bureau of Land Management)

 

WASHINGTON, DC, December 5, 2017 (ENS) – President Donald Trump Monday signed proclamations to shrink the boundaries of two national monuments in Utah – Bears Ears National Monument and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. The proclamations result in five distinct monument units within the two monuments.

Conservation groups and native American tribes warn that by shrinking these national monuments, their cultural, paleontological and wilderness resources will be left exposed to oil, gas and coal leasing and development, as well as the location and development of new uranium mining claims. They have gone to court to try and block Trump’s move, saying he has illegally overreached the power of the presidency.

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President Donald Trump (Photo by Gage Skidmore)

“No one values the splendor of Utah more than the people of Utah – and no one knows better how to use it. Families will hike and hunt on land they have known for generations, and they will preserve it for generations to come.” said President Trump, announcing the shrinking of these monuments in Salt Lake City, Utah.

“The Antiquities Act does not give the Federal Government unlimited power to lock up millions of acres of land and water, and it’s time we ended this abusive practice,” Trump said. “Public lands will once again be for public use.”

But national monuments do not “lock up millions of acres of land and water.” Instead, in all U.S. national monuments, people can go camping and backpacking, hunting and fishing, cycling and horseback riding. They can ride motorized vehicles on designated roads

National monuments protect “existing rights,” meaning, whatever people did there before it was protected as a national monument, they can probably still do after it is designated. This includes previously existing: oil and gas leases, access to private property, valid mining claims, roads and utility infrastructure and livestock grazing.

Bears Ears
Ancient homes in Bears Ears National Monument (Photo courtesy Bureau of Land Management)

Bears Ears National Monument, located in San Juan County in southeastern Utah, was established by President Barack Obama by presidential proclamation under the Antiquities Act on December 28, 2016.

The monument protected 1,351,849 acres of public land surrounding the Bears Ears, a pair of mesas.

President Trump’s proclamation reduced its size by 85 percent to a total of 201,876 acres divided into two monument units.

The Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument protected 1,880,461 acres of land in southern Utah, the largest land area of all U.S. National Monuments.

President Bill Clinton designated the area as a national monument in 1996 using his authority under the Antiquities Act.

Trump’s proclamation reduces the monument’s size by almost 50 percent, with the remaining land broken up into three separate areas.

A group of Native American tribes immediately filed suit against President Trump and administration officials, claiming that Trump’s decision to shrink Bears Ears National Monument is “in violation of the United States Constitution and the Antiquities Act of 1906.”

Representatives from the Hopi, Zuni, Ute Mountain Ute, the Navajo Nation and the Ute Indian tribes accused Trump of exceeding “the limited authority delegated to his office,” violating “the Antiquities Act and the separation of powers established in the Constitution” and circumventing the law by “attempting to evade that strict limitation” of his power.

The lawsuit, the first against Trump’s decision to shrink the monument, was filed at the same time that a group of environmental organizations sued Trump and Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke for slashing Utah’s Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, attacking the proclamation as an abuse of the president’s authority.

Earthjustice is representing eight organizations in a suit charging that the president violated the 1906 Antiquities Act by stripping monument protections: The Wilderness Society, the Grand Canyon Trust, the Sierra Club, Defenders of Wildlife, Great Old Broads for Wilderness, Center for Biological Diversity, WildEarth Guardians and Western Watersheds Project.

The Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance and Natural Resources Defense Council are co-plaintiffs in the lawsuit and are represented by in-house counsel.

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Cliffs in Grand Escalante National Monument, Utah (Photo courtesy Bureau of Land Management)

“President Trump has perpetrated a terrible violation of America’s public lands and heritage by going after this dinosaur treasure trove,” said Heidi McIntosh, managing attorney in Earthjustice’s Rocky Mountains office.

“While past presidents have used the Antiquities Act to protect unique lands and cultural sites in America, Trump is instead mangling the law, opening this national monument to coal mining instead of protecting its scientific, historic, and wild heritage,” said McIntosh. “We will not let this stand. We will use the power of the law to stop Trump’s illegal actions.”

The Grand Staircase-Escalante contains dinosaur fossils found nowhere else in the world. Since its designation, 21 new dinosaur species have been unearthed by scientists in the monument, leading some to call these lands a “Dinosaur Shangri-la,” and a “geologic wonderland.”

Grand Staircase holds one of the richest collections of fossils from the Late Cretaceous Period, which gives scientists and the public alike an unparalleled window into the dinosaurs that lived in these lands 10 million years ago.

In mid-October, scientists airlifted one of the most complete tyrannosaur skeletons ever found out of Grand Staircase. These fossils are found in the Kaiparowits Plateau, where the coal industry has long coveted access for coal mining that would wreak havoc on this dinosaur treasure trove that belongs to the American people.

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Map of coal deposits in Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument (Map courtesy Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance)

“I’m a resident of Kanab, and there are a lot of local businesses that are completely dependent on tourism related to Grand Staircase-Escalante,” said Laura Welp of Western Watersheds Project, and a former botanist at Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument with the Bureau of Land Management.

“The entire staircase of spectacular geological layers, with its world-class fossil resources, deserves to be protected intact from the threat of coal mining and other types of commercial exploitation,” said Welp.

Trump’s executive order to shrink Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument followed a review conducted by Secretary Zinke.
Over 2.7 million Americans voiced their support for national monuments across the country, and public participation in the comment period was overwhelmingly in favor of keeping these public lands and waters protected just as they are.

“President Trump is attempting an unauthorized remodel of the Grand Staircase, knocking out not only geologic steps but cornerstones of the evolution of species, human history, and our cultural heritage as well,” said Tim Peterson, Utah Wildlands Program Director with the Grand Canyon Trust. “We’ve spent 20 years working to preserve Grand Staircase, and now we’re asking the courts to help us reconstruct what was torn down today.”

“The Trump administration’s effort to sell out our public lands is deeply unpopular and goes against American values,” said Michael Brune, executive director of the Sierra Club. “We will work to ensure our lands and waters remain open to the public and protected for future generations to explore and enjoy.”

“For more than two decades, through Democratic and Republican Administrations alike, we have worked with the BLM, paleontologists, local landowners, ranchers and business owners to ensure the monument’s resources are protected,” said Nada Culver, senior counsel for The Wilderness Society. “This unlawful, short-sighted action by President Trump is an affront to that collaborative work happening and to the benefits the monument provides to research, the local economy, and all Americans.”

“Despite the call for public comments, Trump never cared that we, the public, wanted him to keep his hands off our monuments,” said Chris Krupp, Public Earth Guardian at WildEarth Guardians. “He’s not concerned with those of us that camp, hike, fish and hunt. He’d rather give another handout to oil, gas and coal companies.”

President Bill Clinton protected the lands of Grand Staircase as a national monument on September 18, 1996 using the Antiquities Act, a century-old law that has been used by 16 presidents since Theodore Roosevelt to protect some of our nation’s most cherished landscapes and cultural heritage.

Congress enacted the law in 1906, granting presidents the authority to create national monuments on federal lands to protect significant natural, cultural, historic or scientific features. The Antiquities Act does not, however, grant presidents the authority to diminish or rescind the monument designations of their predecessors.

“Grand Staircase is a cradle of biodiversity and losing even an acre would be a crime,” said Taylor McKinnon of the Center for Biological Diversity. “Scientists have identified nearly four dozen new species of butterflies here. We must protect this monument’s wildlife, stunning landscapes and cultural treasures for future generations. Trump and the fossil-fuel industry have picked the wrong battle.”

“If the Trump administration thinks Grand Staircase-Escalante can be sold out without a fight, they’re in for a huge surprise,” said Jamie Rappaport Clark, president and CEO of Defenders of Wildlife and a former director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. “We’ll be seeing them in court.”

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Demonstrators protest the carving up of these two national monuments at a protest march in Salt Lake City, Utah, Dec. 2, 2017 (Photo by KristineL761)

Copyright Environment News Service (ENS) 2017. All rights reserved.

 

 

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