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Donald J. Trump National Parks Highway

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Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument/BLM

A group has asked for a federal investigation into how redrawn boundaries of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument have financially benefited a Utah legislator/BLM

In a state, Utah, where most politicians would like to take over federal lands, and where President Trump's proclamation breaking up Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante national monuments was rousingly applauded, there's a move to designate a "Donald J. Trump National Parks Highway."

The proposal, introduced to the Utah Legislature by a lawmaker who long has shown his disdain for federal lands management in the state, would attach that designation to a route that runs down U.S. 191 from Interstate 70, past Moab, and down to Blanding, where it would turn right to pick up Utah 95 West and head to Hanksville, where it would connect with Utah 24 and then Utah 12 towards Bryce Canyon National Park. The route would continue west to Cedar City and Interstate 15, where it would head south to St. George, head a bit north to run by Zion National Park, and then wrap up on U.S. 89 at Lake Powell inside Glen Canyon National Recreation Area.

All told, the proposed route would pass Arches and Canyonlands national parks, Natural Bridges National Monument, Capitol Reef and Bryce Canyon national parks, Cedar Breaks National Monument, and Zion National Park. And, of course, the fragments of Bears Ears and Grand Staircase national monuments.

"Contrary to some beliefs out there, Donald Trump really is a supporter of public lands. He’s a big supporter of national parks," state Rep. Mike Noel said in a Salt Lake Tribune story. 

Nearly 3 million people across the country who voiced their opinions that the president should not break up Grand Staircase-Escalante and Bears Ears likely would disagree with Mr. Noel. However, for him the president's action placed a 40-acre farm he owns outside the new boundaries of Grand Staircase. The boundaries proposed by the administration take an interesting jog around his farm, according to maps obtained by the Western Values Project.

Rep. Mike Noel's farm at Grand Staircase National Monument/Western Values Project

Existing GSENM boundary with Noel’s undisclosed land in white (Bureau of Land Management). Right: New GSENM boundary drawn to exclude Noel’s land from the monument. A red square (added) indicates Noel’s property. (Department of the Interior)/Western Values Project

Western Values, an organization that has battled the Trump administration and Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke for their public lands management decisions, earlier this week asked Interior's Inspector General to investigate how Mr. Noel benefited from the president's proclamation. 

According to the group, the redrawn boundaries of Grand Staircase-Escalante also open up federal lands for a water pipeline from Lake Powell to St. George that would benefit the Kane County Water Conservancy District, which Mr. Noel heads as executive director.

"Representative Noel has gloated about his influence over the illegal redrawing of the Grand Staircase-Escalante boundary ever since Secretary Zinke first announced that it was on the chopping block - meeting with the Secretary multiple times,” said Chris Saeger, executive director of the Western Values Project. “What has become clear is that Noel failed to disclose the land he owned within the boundary to just about everyone, except maybe the Internal Revenue Service. Not only is Noel in violation of Utah state law but, more importantly, it calls into question how the proclaimed new Grand Staircase boundary came to be.”

U.S. Rep. Raul Grijalva also pressed Secretary Zinke on the seeming benefits Mr. Noel received from the boundary changes. He has asked the secretary whether he knew of Mr. Noel's land ownership in the monument; whether Mr. Noel told Secretary Zinke of his lands in the monument; whether he or his staff asked Mr. Noel if he had any conflicts of interest; whether he knows if any other elected official in Utah has a financial interest in the boundary changes for Grand Staircase-Escalante; and "how will the Department of Interior ensure that future administration policies are not tainted by similar financial conflicts of interest."

For his part, Mr. Noel told the Salt Lake Tribune that the monument boundaries created by Presidents Clinton (Grand Staircase-Escalante) and Obama (Bears Ears), prevented Kane County residents from grazing cattle in those areas, cutting firewood, and even attracting movie productions in search of Western landscapes.

At the Center for American Progress, Public Lands Director Kate Kelly shook her head at the proposal.

"The same anti-public lands representative who stands to financially benefit from Trump’s evisceration of national monuments now wants to stamp Trump’s name on a highway that honors national parks," she said in an email. "It is an absurdity, wrapped in a joke, inside an enigma. If this up-is-down proposal were to ever become reality, I can only imagine the amount of money Utah would have to spend to replace all the stolen and damaged signs; there’s a lot of creative ways to vandalize something with 'Donald J. Trump' and 'national parks' in the same sentence."

In its request for an investigation by the Inspector General, Western Values said:

"... it appears President Trump amended the boundaries of a national monument – in part and perhaps unknowingly – to financially benefit one person: Rep. Noel. As a result, the Office of the Inspector General should investigate this matter to determine: 1) the extent of Rep. Noel’s influence on the proposal to revise the boundaries of GSENM, including whether and to what extent the boundaries included in the proposal submitted to the president reflected changes suggested by Rep. Noel; 2) whether and to what extent Sec. Zinke was aware of Rep. Noel’s financial interest in revised boundaries43; 3) whether Sec. Zinke improperly granted Rep. Noel any preferential treatment in allowing him to influence the process and in the resulting proposed boundaries; and 4) whether, by allowing an individual with a financial stake in the outcome of the revision process, Secretary Zinke improperly created at least the appearance of a conflict of interest."

In his letter, Mr. Saeger stressed that, "general ethical precepts make clear that government officials may not make decisions for the improper purpose of bestowing preferential treatment or a financial benefit on any private individual. Yet this appears to be exactly what has taken place here."

On Monday, the Utah Legislation is expected to take up Mr. Noel's proposal to honor the president with a highway in his name.

Comments

A committee at the Utah legislature just voted 9 -2 to advance this bill for vote by the entire House. 

https://www.deseretnews.com/article/900012063/trump-national-highway-des...

https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2018/03/05/bagley-cartoon-gop-talk...

The current legislative session ends at midnight Thursday.  Here's hoping the state senate has more sense and that this thing dies.  Thankfully, the Utah legislature meets for only 45 days each year.  Can you imagine how much harm they could do if they met full time?


Donald J. Trump National Parks Highway. Classy.

 

Reality has now become a parody of The Onion.


He never goes to the parks and he helicopters over the highways.

Makes perfect sense, in a Trumpian world, as long as the road signs have gold lettering.


I've never liked naming anything after someone still living and think a given amount of time should pass even after their death. That said, there are far more important problems in the world than to waste time and energy grousing about the name of a highway.


far more important problems in the world than to waste time and energy grousing about the name of a highway.

Not for people whose purpose in life is to grouse and then call a billionaire President a moron. I agree with you about naming something after a living person.  I'm not even sure its a good idea to name after they have passed. 

 


I wonder what the response would be if the West Virginia Legislature were to rename I-79 and I-77 the President Barrack Obama Highway To Coal, or the Clinton Coal Country Highway....


"wonder what the response would be if the West Virginia Legislature were to rename I-79 and I-77 the President Barrack Obama Highway To Coal, or the Clinton Coal Country Highway...."
No doubt a similar reaction from the right Kurt. The only difference being the media would be celebrating it.


Naming anything related to our National Parks after our criminal-in-chief would be a sick joke and a travesty! Donating so you can fight on!!!


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