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Rep. Grijalva Wants Interior Secretary To Close Bears Ears National Monument To Mining, Energy Development

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Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke should withdraw areas within Bears Ears National Monument from mining and oil and gas extraction, according to U.S. Rep. Raúl Grijalva/BLM

Though he's probably fighting uphill, U.S. Rep. Raúl M. Grijalva wants members on the House Natural Resources Committee to sign off on a letter to Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke asking that he withdraw the land inside Bears Ears National Monument’s "traditional, lawful boundaries from new oil, gas and mining claims." 

The move comes shortly ahead of the Feb. 2 opening of much of the monument to new extraction claims, which could be maintained even when President Trump’s illegal shrinking of the monument is overturned in court, according to a release from the Arizona Democrat's office.

On Tuesday the full committee is expected to continue a hearing into legislation that would make President Trump's reduction of Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante national monuments by 1 million acres permanent. President Obama established Bears Ears in 2016 following years of public input, including from five Native American tribes who will testify tomorrow.

According to Rep. Grijalva, the committee's Republican majority did not invite any tribes to speak at the Jan. 9 hearing that opened discussion of the legislation offered by U.S. Rep. John Curtis, a Utah Republican. That action spurred Democrats to pursue a seldom-used maneuver known as a “Rule 11 letter” requiring a continuation of the hearing with witnesses identified by the Committee minority. Tuesday's hearing is expected to mark the fulfillment of that requirement.

Each of the tribes strongly opposes Rep. Curtis’ bill and the larger effort to destroy protections for Bears Ears, according to Rep. Grijalva.

Mr. Curtis’ bill “attempts to take a monument designated to protect and preserve tribal cultural and natural resources and turn it into a multi-use area for uranium mining, increased motorized vehicles and increased grazing that would damage these sensitive resources," said Tony Small, vice chairman of the Ute Indian Tribe’s Business Committee. 

Mr. Small is scheduled to testify at Tuesday's hearing.

According to Rep. Grijalva, while Rep. Curtis’ bill "includes a withdrawal of the areas in question, the language has no effect unless the bill becomes law, which is far from certain given the strong Democratic and tribal opposition to the bill’s other features. A Zinke withdrawal would protect the region now as the bill works its way through Congress."

As the Washington Post has noted, the areas Trump cut out of Bears Ears National Monument and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument with last year’s unlawful executive order “contain large deposits of coal, uranium, oil and gas.” According to recent reports in the New York Times and Washington Post, foreign mining companies are eager for the opportunity to purchase development rights throughout the area. It is not clear that, once granted, the right to develop such projects would be rescinded even after a court restores a monument’s boundaries.

Even many Republican lawmakers, including Rep. Curtis and Utah Gov. Gary Herbert, have said they do not want to see extraction in Bears Ears. Rep. Grijalva’s letter gives lawmakers a chance to communicate that wish directly to Zinke.

“If we’re serious about preventing mining and drilling in Bears Ears, the administration needs to take concrete action now, not point to a bill that may not cross the finish line,” the Democrat said Monday. “Secretary Zinke needs to step up, not just pay lip service, and my colleagues can help push him in the right direction. We’ll see who means what they say about protecting this land.”

Comments

Need to emphasize 'foreign' mining here.  They tried to use that against Hillary, so lets blow it back on this administration.  Zinke is proposing giving away vital mineral resources to 'foreign' mining operators.  This is a fleecing of America and theft of private lands to enrich a few mining and ranching firms.


I disagree. I find domestic mining or drilling as objectionable in ancestral burial grounds as I do foreign.


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