Taking a Stand for the Land

View Gallery 4 Photos

Concerned citizens gathered at Paramount Ranch in the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area (SMMNRA) on December 2, in solidarity with activists all over the country who came together to protest the Trump Administration’s attack on public lands.

The protest was part of a growing groundswell of anger generated by Trump’s plan to gut two Utah National Monuments. On December 4, the President signed proclamations that shrink 1.35-million-acre Bears Ears National Monument by almost 85 percent, and eliminate half of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, leaving just 997,490 acres of the 1.9-million-acre park. 

Activists warn that Trump isn’t planning to stop with the Utah monuments. He has two-dozen more under review, including California’s Carrizo Plain National Monument and the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument, two key habitat areas that are essential for wildlife migration and dispersal throughout Southern and Central California.

Observers fear that the dismantling of the Antiquities Act will leave all national parks and monuments at risk, even popular and much-used locations like the SMMNRA. Trump’s action is seen as a way to open the door for the unmaking of any park that contains resources of value to developers, the oil, mining and lumber industries, and other powerful lobbying groups. 

Trump boasted at the signing ceremony that he is a real estate developer and stated that the Utah monuments were “harmful to ranching, hunting, and development.” He stated that the federal protections “impede” the construction of roads in undeveloped areas.

“This tragic overreach of the Antiquities Act threatens your hearts,” he said.

Critics, including tribal governments and conservation organizations, counter that it is the oil, mining and cattle industries who are threatened, not “rural families stopped from their beloved activities,” as stated by the President. They question Trump’s authority to tamper with the Antiquities Act used by previous presidents to create new national monuments by executive order, and the legality of the President’s proclamations.

The National Resource Defense Council (NRDC) has already vowed to challenge Trump in court, as well as the Hopi Tribe, the Navajo Nation, the Ute Tribe, the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe and Zuni Pueblo.

“We will stand and fight all the way,’ said Russell Begaye, president of the Navajo Nation.

“The Antiquities Act of 1906 gives presidents the authority to designate national monuments,” NRDC President Rhea Shu Tweeted. “It does not empower them to slice up monuments designated by others.”

The Antiquities Act has never been challenged. It has been accepted that presidents cannot undo the monuments made by their predecessors, and that only Congress has the authority to make changes to a national park or monument. The legal battle is expected to go all the way to the Supreme Court.

Another battle is looming in Congress. Arizona Congressman Ruben Gallego is working to pass legislation to protect Bears Ears. 

“[Trump’s] plan to shrink Bears Ears National Monument by 85 percent is unprecedented,” wrote Gallego in a Tweet. Gallego has co-authored legislation to protect Bears Ears and described Trump’s move to eviscerate the park as “reckless.”

“Last year, following extensive negotiations with five Native American tribes, President Obama signed Proclamation 9558, which established the Bears Ears National Monument, conserving 1.35 million acres of wilderness and protecting more than 100,000 Native American archaeological and cultural sites,” Gallego said.

“Unfortunately, following a review conducted with no meaningful input from the tribes, the Department of the Interior recommended downsizing the monument—an action that would be without precedent in American history.” 

Gallego’s bill seeks to “protect the original acreage identified by the tribes as housing culturally sensitive artifacts and sacred lands.” Its co-sponsors include Topanga-area Representative Ted Lieu. It has also been endorsed by every major environmental organization from the Sierra Club and the NRDC to The Wilderness Society and Earthjustice.

“The Bears Ears National Monument Expansion Act is a model for how we should be protecting special places,” said Michael Brune, Sierra Club’s Executive Director, in support of Gallego’s bill. 

Instead of turning our public lands over to corporate polluters, our country should be protecting the landscape, wildlife and thousands of sites of spiritual importance within Bears Ears from threats like illegal ATV use, looting and vandalism,” Brune wrote.

However, Gallego is up against Utah Congressman and passionate oil industry advocate Rob Bishop, who is proposing H.R. 3990, a bill that would essentially eliminate the Antiquities Act, making it almost impossible for future presidents to create major new monuments, and easier for them to dissolve existing monuments.

Local activists are furious. Agoura Hills resident Jennette Wells organized the protest at Paramount Ranch. “I’ve never done anything like this before,” she told the Messenger. “But I was so angry I had to do something.” 

Wells says she doesn’t use social media, but was able to enlist a friend to spread the word online. She signed up with the Center for Biological Diversity’s “Ignite Change” movement, filed for a permit for her event and rounded up as many equestrians, cyclists, hikers and park-going families as she could find on short notice. 

“We need to say no to Trump,” Wells said. “We need to say no to Representative Rob Bishop. “It’s easy to call or send a text. Everyone can get involved.”

 

To learn more about the fight to save Bears Ears, check out #MonumentsforAll, or monumentsforall.org.

 

Suzanne Guldimann

Suzanne Guldimann is an author, artist, and musician who lives in Malibu and loves the Santa Monica Mountains. She has worked as a journalist reporting on local news and issues for more than a decade, and is the author of nine books of music for the harp. Suzanne's newest book, "Life in Malibu", explores local history and nature. She can be reached at suzanne@messengermountainnews.com

No Comments Yet

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.