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United StatesPolitics4 days ago

Utah National Monument Survives Attempt to Rescind its Management Plan

Autumn Gillard, a cultural resource manager for the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah, has been advocating for the protection of the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. She expressed concern over the damage to ancient petroglyphs, including graffiti and theft attempts, which threaten both cultural heritage and educational opportunities for visitors. Recently, the coalition she leads successfully resisted congressional efforts to rescind the monument's management plan.

GRAND STAIRCASE-ESCALANTE NATIONAL MONUMENT, Utah—When Autumn Gillard first visited this national monument in southern Utah’s red rock country, she hiked to the top of a plateau. Her heart was broken there.

For her people, the southern Paiute, the bighorn sheep is sacred. Ancient petroglyphs depicting the species that still calls Grand Staircase-Escalante home covered the cliff walls around Gillard’s perch.

But the years have been harsh to the panel of petroglyphs. Graffiti lined the walls. The Cut Sheep Panel was even named for the big square sliced into the stone around it, evidence that someone tried to steal one of the petroglyphs from the site.

“All I could think was, ‘I need to help, I have to help protect this,’” she recalled. “But I also thought of education, and that if we lose these places on the Colorado Plateau in the state of Utah, we’re going to [have] a large gap of education for people who visit these areas that want to learn more about history, culture and archeology in the area of the Southwest.”

Gillard, the cultural resource manager for the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah and coordinator of the Grand Staircase-Escalante Inter-Tribal Coalition, has been fighting to protect this monument ever since that first visit in 2017. Last week, the coalition she leads and its partners notched a win in their efforts to fend off Congressional efforts to overturn the management plan put in place for the monument during the administration of President Joe Biden. Rescinding the plan enacted by the Bureau of Land Management would have allowed for more off-road vehicle use, more grazing and more “vegetation management” with timber harvests and chaining operations in which bulldozers drag chains strung between them across miles of the desert landscape to rip up native vegetation and clear the land for cattle.

Designated by President Bill Clinton in 1996 and spanning 1.87 million acres of public land, Grand Staircase-Escalante protects scores of archeological resources and sacred sites for local tribes, along with a plethora of wildlife. With its orange-and-red-colored rock formations and canyons, old-growth pinyon and juniper forests and its namesake river carving a path to the Colorado River, it is one of the more remote landscapes in the lower 48.

“When [people] make the journey and pilgrimage to this monument, they get to be enveloped in some of America’s most untouched land,” Gillard said. “They get to see what this country looks like without mass development.”

Despite vast public support for the monument, Utah Republicans and both Trump administrations have worked for years to dismantle and downsize it, with the first Trump administration cutting 900,000 acres from the monument before the Biden administration restored it to its original size. This year, Utah Republicans in Congress introduced a “joint resolution of disapproval” that would prompt a vote to use the Congressional Review Act (CRA) to revoke the monument’s current resource management plan.

The CRA is a 1996 law that Congress enacted to overturn certain federal agency actions through a special review process. Congressional Republicans have implemented it a record number of times over the past year, using it to overturn management plans for lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management, and most notably overturning the protections from mining the Biden administration implemented in Minnesota’s Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness , an unprecedented move to rescind an executive mineral withdrawal to allow a mine to be permitted in the area.

In January , at the request of Utah Rep. Celeste Maloy, one of the monument’s leading critics, the Government Accountability Office issued an opinion that the monument’s management plan is subject to review by Congress. That decision, opponents said, was a remarkable escalation of CRA use and presented a potential threat to other monuments.

Petroglyphs and pictographs line the rock walls of Catstair Canyon in Grand Staircase-Escalante Monument. Credit: Tim Peterson

An aerial view of Grand Staircase-Escalante’s Wolverine Circle Cliffs. Credit: Tim Peterson/EcoFlight

“If critics believe parts of the Grand Staircase plan should be changed, they should say which parts and why,” said Erik Stanfield, an anthropologist with the Navajo Nation Historic Preservation Department. “They should make that case in public. They should not pretend the process never happened. They should not use an obscure Congressional procedure to erase years of work because the final compromise did not tilt far enough in their favor.”

After the joint resolution of disapproval, the CRA allowed 60 days in which a simple majority could vote out the current management plan, which was implemented in January 2025, and the monument would have been regulated under the less-restrictive 2020 plan. That plan only covered about half of the monument, as it was done after Trump shrunk the monument during his first term and before its boundarie…

Read the full article at Inside Climate News
Source document: Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument Management Plan

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Inside Climate NewsIndependentCenter4 days ago
Utah National Monument Survives Attempt to Rescind its Management Plan

Autumn Gillard, a cultural resource manager for the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah, has been advocating for the protection of the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. She expressed concern over the damage to ancient petroglyphs, including graffiti and theft attempts, which threaten both cultural heritage and educational opportunities for visitors. Recently, the coalition she leads successfully resisted congressional efforts to rescind the monument's management plan.

Bias read (Center): The article presents the perspectives of Indigenous leaders and their advocacy without overtly favoring any political side. It focuses on cultural preservation and resistance to policy changes, with no clear ideological framing or biased language. Both the challenges faced by the monument and the成功的

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