Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke Review Proposes Shrinking 4 of 27 National Monuments
Environmental activists go ballistic.

Department of Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke has sent a report to President Donald Trump in which he reportedly proposes to shrink the size of four of the 27 National Monuments he was asked to review. Specifically, Zinke is recommending that the area of Utah's Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante and Oregon's Cascade-Siskiyou National Monuments be reduced. The 1.9 million-acre Grand Staircase-Escalante Monument was established by President Bill Clinton in 1996. The 1.35 million-acre Bears Ears National Monument was created by President Barack Obama in December last year and he expanded the Cascade-Siskiyou Monument created by Clinton from 65,000 to 113,00 acres in January, 2017.
Naturally, environmental activists are livid. "No president has ever shown such disregard for the public's desire to protect our public lands or such blatant pandering to the industries that want to drill, mine, and log them," asserts the Sierra Club.
Both Grand Staircase-Escalante and Bears Ears Monuments were designated by Democratic presidents who had lost badly among voters in Utah. Both monuments were opposed by the Utah state legislature and the state's congressional delegation. In fact, the Clinton administration notified the Utah congressional delegation and state governor only 24 hours before the ceremony establishing the Grand Staircase-Escalante monument. Clinton was apparently eager to block a proposed coal mine in the region which, by some estimates, would have produced nearly $1 trillion in coal over thirty years.
As recently as this past February, the Utah legislature passed and the governor signed a resolution urging that the boundaries of the Grand Staircase-Escalante Monument be reduced. Among other things, the resolution declared that the creation of the monument has "had a negative impact on the prosperity, development, economy, custom, culture, heritage, educational opportunities, health, and well-being of local communities." Similarly, the state legislature passed in February and the governor signed a resolution urging President Trump to rescind the Bears Ears National Monument designation.
Presidents have the power to designate national monuments under the Antiquities Act of 1906 which states:
The President of the United States is authorized, in his discretion, to declare by public proclamation historic landmarks, historic and prehistoric structures, and other objects of historic or scientific interest that are situated upon the lands owned or controlled by the Government of the United States to be national monuments, and may reserve as a part thereof parcels of land, the limits of which in all cases shall be confined to the smallest area compatible with proper care and management of the objects to be protected.
Can the Trump administration revoke or substantially revise national monument designations? Environmental activists argue that the Antiquities Act is one way ratchet - subsequent administrations do not have the power to undo the creation national monuments. While contested by other scholars, legal analyses by the Congressional Research Service however suggest that while presidents may not have the power to revoke previous designations, they do apparently have the authority to modify them, including making adjustments with regard to their boundaries. This appears to be the strategy being recommended by Zinke; modification, not revocation.
The federal government owns about one-third of the land area of the country which provokes conflicts over its management between central government bureaucracies beholden to national environmental groups versus local communities that use and depend on the resources located on adjacent federal lands. It is not surprising that conflicts between locals and federal bureaucrats are more contentious in Utah since the federal government owns about 65 percent of that state's landscape. Are bitter fights over the proper use of government-owned lands inevitable? Perhaps not.
"It is clear that the politicized approach to national monument protection is broken," assert the researchers at the Property Environment Research Center in Bozeman, Montana. What to do? Establishing federal land trusts to manage national monuments like Bears Ears for the benefit of the general public would be "a better way to balance competing interests," argues PERC research fellow Holly Fretwell. Modeled on local land trusts that already manage about 56 million acres (twice the amount of land in all of the national parks in the contiguous U.S.), national monument trustee boards would consist of representatives from local communities, researchers, environmental organizations, and tribal members.
The boards would be given custodial authority and financial accountability over each monument. Financial accountability is key since it incentivizes the managing trustees to internalize the trade-offs of competing resource use such as recreation, preservation, grazing, mining, and so forth. Such national monument trusts would "be required to cover all costs either from revenues generated from the assets in the monument or from private contributions of funds, property, or services by individuals, corporations, or charitable foundations."
If the Trump administration and Secretary Zinke are in search of ways to encourage cooperation rather than conflict over the use of public lands, they would do well to propose the adoption of federal land trusts.
*Disclosure: I have been the happy beneficiary of grants, conferences, and intellectual enrichment from PERC for many years.
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President Barack Obama in December last year and he expanded the Cascade-Siskiyou Monument created by Clinton from 65,000 to 113,00 (sic) acres in January, 2017.
I can only assume that it was a complete rape of the earth until that exact moment.
yes, the additional 48,000 acres were filled with oil companies and miners and frackers and other forms of Earth Rape until Obama waved his magic wand and banished them all, returning the land to pristine and unspoiled status overnight. And as soon as Zinke removes these protections, they will be immediately face instantaneous exploitation and re-destruction, as we see in all parts of the earth not currently protected by Federal Law.
Not it wasn't. It was basically just wilderness. The loggers, frackers, etc didn't want it until they couldn't have it.
I'm sure you have proof of this lie, right?
Both were so obviously critical that Obama waited until after the 2016 election to expand the designation as a big middle finger to Utah.
just a finger diddle, the complete rape will occur soon though..
If they sue and win, I suggest Trump give them a taste of their own medecine -- declare Central Park and Golden Gate Park to be National Monuments, and oh by the way, everything within 100 miles. Buffer space, doncha know.
Not quite. Take all the brownstone apartments surrounding central park, much of manhattan, all of beverly hills, the gated communities in San Francisco, all of martha's vinyard, georgetown, and declare all that land to be national monuments.
A better idea is to sell off most federal land,including many military bases.
But where da bitches at?
Which reminds me that the Audubon Society allows drilling in some of its bird sanctuaries. A few years back they were getting some flak about it but calmly explained that they were making sure the drilling was done in the safest possible manner and that the revenues were going toward buying more land for bird sanctuaries and supporting the work of the Audubon Society. In other words, they did a cost/benefit analysis. Turns out cost/benefit analysis works differently when both the costs and the benefits are yours rather than the benefits are yours and somebody else gets stuck with the costs.
Fuck selling the federal land. That's crazy talk. That land is my land and your land. Watch the movie 'Ernest Goes To Camp' and get your mind right.
Everything gets sold to the highest bidder.
And these environmentalists can buy the land.
Well that would certainly make it much more difficult to declare every mountain range in the west a wilderness study area and get half of them declared actual wilderness areas all at the tax payers expense. You want it shut down to development, buy it and pay to fence it off.
The highest bidder often bids wirh other people's money.
Exactly!!
It would be nice if this was really about protecting areas of great beauty or historical relevance. It's more about stopping development of natural resources and limiting access. They aren't interested in protecting public lands. They're interested in further their agenda through government decree. Protecting some areas in the public interest is probably a good idea but there ought to be broad agreement through a transparent and democratic process.
But how are presidents going to take revenge on people who voted against them if you deprive them of the power to arbitrarily take away people's property? Will someone please think of the presidents?!
I would, but it makes me throw up in my mouth a little....
"No president has ever shown such disregard for the public's desire to protect our public lands or such blatant pandering to the industries that want to drill, mine, and log them," asserts the Sierra Club.
Bullshit. The public didn't get a vote. Only the sitting president and his cronies at the Sierra club did.
We really do need to start saying to these "Conserve everything" organizations; "Hey, you want to play here? Buy it."
It is interesting to note that if these areas were to be designated as National Parks, there would be an extensive review process, with all the stakeholders, etc. involved in determining If a park would be designated, and the size, boundaries, etc. of the park. But National Monuments are just designated by the whims of the President. It seems to me that they were never intended to be large areas, but rather more like, well, monuments.
A lot of the national monuments are pure land grab by US fed government and sometimes I suspect they do it to harass miners.