Utah fighting the laws of federal landNews Home Page Home
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Source of this article - Los Angeles Times, April 22, 2007
The state is helping pay for legal challenges to federal jurisdiction, much of
it, critics say, without oversight.
 Bill Hughes of Moab drives along the Amasa Back Trail in
Kane Creek Canyon near Moab, Utah. The surrounding land is federally owned and
some of it is off limits to motorized recreation, but with financial help from
the state, Grand County and others in southern Utah are challenging the federal
government for jurisdiction.
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By Julie Cart, Times Staff Writer
RECAPTURE CANYON, UTAH — It's a small gesture of defiance — a narrow metal
bridge that allows off-road vehicles illegal access to this archeologically rich
canyon. But the modest structure, built by San Juan County officials on U.S.
government land, is a symbol of the widespread local resistance to federal
authority across much of southern Utah's magnificent
countryside.
Historically, people in the rural West have challenged
federal jurisdiction, claiming ownership over rights of way, livestock
management and water use. But nowhere is the modern-day defiance more
determined, better organized or more well-funded than in Utah, where millions of
taxpayer dollars are being spent fighting federal authority, and where the state
government is helping to pay the tab, much of it, critics say, without
oversight.
For the last decade the Utah Legislature and two state
agencies have been funneling money to southern Utah counties to bankroll legal
challenges to federal jurisdiction. Most recently, a state representative
persuaded the Legislature to provide $100,000 to help finance a lawsuit by
ranchers and two counties seeking to expand cattle grazing in Grand
Staircase-Escalante National Monument.
Grand Staircase is one of a dozen
parks and monuments that draw tens of millions of visitors to the region every
year to take in the spectacular high desert and red-rock canyons that have awed
travelers since John Wesley Powell voyaged down the Green and Colorado rivers in
1869.
 Lynell Schalk,a former BLM law enforcement official,
crosses an illegal bridge recently installed in Recapture Canyon, near Blanding
Utah, that allows off-road vehicle access. (Spencer Weiner / LAT)
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Settlers, on the other hand, have been famously indifferent to the
scenery. "A hell of a place to lose a cow," is how 19th century homesteader
Ebenezer Bryce is said to have described the labyrinthine landscape now known as
Bryce Canyon National Park.
"This is a beautiful and unique land," said
Bill Smart, retired editor of Salt Lake City's Deseret News. "It's distressing
that we can't all be more appreciative of the values that other people see here.
To me it's very disappointing that our own people can't see what we
have."
In southern Utah, where the U.S. controls nearly 90% of the land
in some counties, many residents feel they are permanent tenants on land their
ancestors pioneered. The resentment hardens whenever the Washington, D.C.,
landlord imposes restrictions on ranching, mining, energy development and
motorized recreation.
"Who gets to control the land is the great American
story," said Karl Jacoby, associate professor of history at Brown University.
"In part it is about economics, but a lot of it is about identity and who we are
as a people."
 Schalk checks damage at an ancient Pueblo archeological site in Arch Canyon.
Schalk is among a coalition of activists and environmentalists who filed a
petition demanding a vehicle ban in Arch Canyon. (Spencer Weiner / LAT)
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Officials of one county have written a bill pending in
Congress that orders the sale of federal land, with the proceeds given to the
county. Other Utah counties have said they will follow suit. And officials from
the two counties surrounding Grand Staircase have lobbied in Washington to
dramatically reduce the 2-million-acre national monument.
Elected
officials have flouted federal authority by bulldozing roads in the Grand
Staircase monument and Capitol Reef National Park, and by tearing down signs
banning off-road vehicles in Canyonlands National Park. A handful of counties
have developed transportation plans that declare roads open that federal land
managers have closed.
Selma Sierra, Utah director of the federal Bureau
of Land Management, insisted that the agency's relationship with counties was
good. "The BLM manages a substantial amount of land in this state. Yes, those
lands belong to everyone in the country, but the decisions we make affect those
individuals more so than anywhere else."
But federal officials say
increases in motorized recreation and scarring of the landscape from energy
exploration are threatening unique historic and cultural treasures and damaging
wildlife habitat.
A recent BLM archeological assessment of 3rd century
Anasazi ruins and cliff dwellings in Recapture Canyon found evidence of looting
and off-road vehicle damage. According to the assessment, the new, county-built
bridge "can be expected to hasten and increase indirect impacts to cultural
resources here."
 Kent Hawkins of Blanding gives his family a ride on an ATV in Recapture Canyon.
The canyon is dotted with fragile archeological sites that are being damaged by
motorized recreation, according to a recent assessment by the federal Bureau of
Land Management. Like much of the land in southern Utah, the canyon is owned by
the federal government which controls access and limits vehicle use. But rural
counties are promoting motorized recreation, along with other uses such as
mining and livestock grazing. (Spencer Weiner / LAT)
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"It's quite common in Utah to hear people say, 'The
federal government should give the land back to the state.' But the state never
owned it," said Daniel McCool, director of the American West Center at the
University of Utah.
McCool said rebellious county commissioners no longer
represented the demographic of the American West. "There is a new rural
resident," he said. "They didn't move here to ranch and raise cattle. They moved
here for the amenities value of the public lands. That's what's driving the
economy now. Today, the single largest nongovernmental components of Utah's
economy are tourism and recreation. Mining, grazing and agriculture are about 3%
to 4% of the economy."
According to an economic analysis commissioned by
the National Parks Conservation Assn., national parks generate at least $4 for
state and local economies for every dollar in the parks' budgets. Zion National
Park, in southwest Utah, had 2.5 million visitors last year and provided nearly
$100 million in annual recreational benefits to the surrounding county, the
study said.
Grand Staircase was responsible for "substantial" economic
growth, higher employment and increased personal income in two surrounding
counties, according to a 2004 study by the Sonoran Institute, a nonpartisan
research group in Tucson.
But Utah Lt. Gov. Gary R. Herbert said in an
interview that the state had endured an "erosion of rights."
 Grand and San Juan counties, near Moab, boast that they have thousands of miles
of four-wheel-drive routes. Most are old and unmaintained trails that were used
for mining or prospecting. Bob Moore of Highland, Utah, powers through a creek
crossing on the Kane Creek Canyon four-wheel-drive trail. (Spencer Weiner / LAT)
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"We're not
going to sit back anymore, we're going to be proactive, we are going to protect
our rights," he said.
State Rep. Mike Noel, a Republican from the
southern community of Kanab, said: It gets down to "sovereignty and autonomy.
It's Western independence. We own the water, we have the right to graze, the
minerals are still available, and the roads belong to us. By dang, we are not
going to give them up."
Noel is part of a self-styled "cowboy caucus" in
the Legislature that has helped direct hundreds of thousands of state dollars to
counties bickering with the federal government.
In addition, the
Constitutional Defense Council, established to protect state and county
interests on federal land, has paid out more than $10 million, much of it to
assist southern counties in legal battles against the BLM and the National Park
Service.
The 2-year-old Public Lands Policy Coordination Office last year
offered each county in Utah $10,000 to fight for rights of way across federal
land and is funding a $1-million study on the economic impact of large federal
holdings in the state.
Critics say taxpayer money should not be used to
fight these legal battles and argue that there is little accounting of how much
money is spent by the Constitutional Defense Council and public lands office. A
2004 state legislative audit of the Constitutional Defense Council concluded
that it provided inadequate financial detail about its operations and
recommended that it issue regular financial statements.
 Grand and San Juan counties, near Moab, boast that they have thousands of miles
of four-wheel-drive routes. Most are old and unmaintained trails that were used
for mining or prospecting. Bob Moore of Highland, Utah, powers through a creek
crossing on the Kane Creek Canyon four-wheel-drive trail. (Spencer Weiner / LAT)
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Even one of the
guiding lights behind the creation of the Constitutional Defense Council said he
couldn't trace how its money was spent. "There are no records, no agenda, no
minutes," said Mark Walsh, executive director of the Utah-based Western Counties
Alliance, who wrote some of the language that established the council. "It's a
little confounding to me that you've got millions going into that office, but no
one knows how it's spent or on what projects."
This month, a federal
judge ruled that two southern Utah counties illegally used public funds to pay
costs in a grazing lawsuit brought by local ranchers against the BLM.
Bob
Keiter, a University of Utah law professor and public lands scholar, suspects
Utahans are largely unaware that the state is helping bankroll the counties'
legal fights.
"The question is whether or not the citizens of the state
realize the degree to which they are subsidizing litigation that cuts across
their interests," said Keiter, director of the Wallace Stegner Center for Land,
Resources and the Environment.
Rural interests continue to dominate the
state legislative process in a manner that is out of proportion to their
representation, Keiter said.
They also have influence with the Bush
administration. In 2003, the administration agreed to withdraw 2.6 million acres
in Utah from wilderness protection, and recently the BLM reinstated leases that
could lead to extensive coal mining in Grand Staircase-Escalante National
Monument.
