Utah



New BLM director sees positive future for Utah land issues

PDF Print E-mail
Written by Deseret News   
Saturday, August 07, 2010

Amy Joi O'Donoghue

SALT LAKE CITY — With the taste of gritty dust in his mouth and the smell of a harvest on the wind, Juan Palma was just a little boy when he worked the fields from south Texas to Yakima Valley, Wash.

Tomatoes and peppers in one state, grapes on the vine in another and hops and sugar beets awaited the hands of Palma's migrant farm family.

It was during this formative time in his youth that the new Utah director of the Bureau of Land Management says his love of the land was planted, even as he plucked its bounty.

"Seeing those beautiful scenic vistas from the back of the truck, peering out through the slats … I thought this has got to be like heaven, those beautiful mountains," Palma said.

Little did he know, as he witnessed the grandeur of the snow-capped Sierras from the floors of the Sacramento Valley, that he would one day go onto manage those lands.

"That is the wonder and acknowledgement — that in America, anything is possible," he said.

A business management major from BYU, Palma may have had his nose stuck in finance and sales at one point, but he was never far from the dirt he grew up with.

Settling in the little town of Vale, Ore., Palma was atop a tractor one day when a farmer who knew his university background asked him why he was still getting his hands dirty.

The question and some soul searching led him to the U.S. Forest Service, where he landed a job.

"I was fascinated that there was an agency like this," Palma said. "The concept of public lands was a foreign idea to me."

He later wound up at the Bureau of Land Management in the eastern Oregon district based in Vale, managing a "big building" he'd watched rise from the ground during the days he drove the tractor.

By 2000, he left the federal agency to take on the responsibility of executive director of the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, a unique two-state compact between Nevada and California established to oversee all planning and development in the Tahoe Region.

It was a déj?vu moment for Palma, who as a boy had stared in awe at the Sierras.

Like so many of the paths in Palma's life, his newest post has him circling back to the time when he was raising his family in Utah and watching his children graduate from high school and go on to college.

He's returned to a sentinel moment in his past this summer and has undertaken management of the Utah BLM, which has been the fulcrum of controversy the past two years — from resource management plans under legal challenge to pulled oil and gas leases once secured at auction.

The BLM, in so many words, has the mandate to be in the middle of the fight, to be the simultaneous whipping boy for environmentalists who argue for wilderness protection and want to restrict use and for those who want "access" to the lands and want to drill, ride ATVs and graze cattle.

Lawsuits over too much use or not enough have originated in Utah, and Palma is well aware of the battlefield he's entered.

"One of the things I would like to bring to Utah is more certainty," he said. "Since I have been in Utah, I have noticed a large degree of uncertainty from the oil and gas industry to others involved."

The "noise" springing from all sides sooner or later needs to be quieted with resolutions that help to settle the fight, he said.

"From what I have heard so far from other people, there is a point and time when all of us just get tired of the rhetoric and of things not moving forward," Palma said, "and that has to change for American citizens — both for the economy and business community and also for the stewardship of the land. Perhaps there is a better way, a different way."

Palma points to the late-July announcement of the Tavputs Plateau natural gas drilling project as an example of a "balanced" approach that allows resource extraction but mandates environmental protections.

Called an unprecedented arrangement that forged cooperation between environmental groups such as the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance and the Bill Barrett Corp., the "programmatic agreement" formalized concessions made by both sides to move forward.

"Without that, we are not really getting at what we need to do to arrive where we need to be," he said. "What gives me optimism is not innocent or naive optimism but rather is based on the physical and tangible things I can see."

Rep. Mike Noel, R-Kanab, one of the most ardent critics of federal land management agencies in Utah, said he also has optimism that comes with Palma's arrival.

"I have heard good things about him," Noel said. "I've heard he is fair, and what I have heard from others who have worked with him has been positive."

Noel, a member of Gov. Gary Herbert's Balanced Resource Council tackling critical land issues, said he plans to keep an "open mind" and hopes to meet with Palma soon.

Scott Groene, director of the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, said his organization has had a chance to meet with Palma and is optimistic as well.

"We have been pleased that he is open to meeting with the public. It certainly is a change from the past. ... He certainly has a big job ahead of him."

As he settles into the dust kicked up by Utah's land management issues, Palma is in many ways ready to get his hands dirty once again as he works to resolve festering environmental issues.

He said he was at a Texas Roadhouse restaurant recently, marveling at the workers as they hustled to serve customers. The back of their shirts say I (heart) my job.

"What energy, what devotion they have," Palma said. "Do I have that much energy, that much devotion, that much commitment? The answer for myself is that I do.

"I love being able to solve problems. Some people would think I was crazy, but to me, problems are nothing but a puzzle where I have to figure out where all the pieces go. I know we have a lot of problems, and I don't yet know where all the pieces are, and I don't know how we are going to solve the puzzle, but I do know the pieces are there if we search enough."

--

Source: http://www.deseretnews.com/article/700054555/New-BLM-director-sees-positive-future-for-Utah-land-issues.html

 

La Sal Trust Lands project targets off-highway vehicle use

PDF Print E-mail
Written by Deseret News   
Friday, August 06, 2010

Amy Joi O'Donoghue

SALT LAKE CITY — A school Trust Lands pilot project involving 28,000 acres in the La Sal Mountains aims to tackle impacts of a 41 percent increase in trails created by off-highway vehicle (OHV) use.

The La Sals project involves two chunks of property owned by the Utah School and Institutional Trust Lands Administration, which is using money from an OHV surcharge of $1.50 per vehicle to fund a system of better-connected trails that accommodates use, yet closes some roads forged by trespass.

Read more... [La Sal Trust Lands project targets off-highway vehicle use]
 

Editorial: Land debate

PDF Print E-mail
Written by Salt Lake Tribune   
Thursday, August 05, 2010

Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar was in Utah this week to listen. And he got an earful from people with widely differing ideas about how America’s publicly owned lands should be used, or not used.

After eight years of President George W. Bush’s one-sided views on developing federal lands, it’s refreshing to see Salazar’s interest in letting all sides have their say. But President Barack Obama’s Great Outdoors Initiative and Salazar’s “listening sessions” have only a limited chance of success as long as there are leaders on both sides who refuse to see any viewpoint but their own.

Read more... [Editorial: Land debate]
 

Utahns give Salazar an earful on public lands

PDF Print E-mail
Written by Salt Lake Tribune   
Wednesday, August 04, 2010

Christopher Smart

Utahns from all walks of life came together Tuesday to talk about public lands. But despite all the polite discussion in close quarters, the various interests remain miles apart.

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar brought his “listening sessions” to a cramped downtown Salt Lake City hotel conference room as part of President Barack Obama’s “Great Outdoors Initiative.” The goal: Allow disparate interests to search for solutions to Utah’s various land-use conundrums.

Read more... [Utahns give Salazar an earful on public lands]
 

Salazar brings conservation campaign to Utah

PDF Print E-mail
Written by BusinessWeek   
Wednesday, August 04, 2010

Paul Foy

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar struck a conciliatory tone Tuesday in Utah, saying it was possible to resolve decades of conflict over development and preservation on the two-thirds of the state's land that is owned by the federal government. Much of it is spectacular canyonlands and raw wilderness.

Salazar held out a compromise reached in a Utah natural-gas drilling project as an example of how to achieve balanced use of wild public lands. The Bureau of Land Management -- part of the Department of the Interior and Utah's biggest landlord -- approved the 626-well project last week near the Green River's Desolation Canyon.

Read more... [Salazar brings conservation campaign to Utah]
 

Ken Salazar says local conservation approach should be blueprint for future

PDF Print E-mail
Written by Deseret News   
Wednesday, August 04, 2010

Amy Joi O'Donoghue

SALT LAKE CITY — Like a conductor directing an orchestra of varied instruments, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar deftly moved from person to person in a public listening session on land-use issues Tuesday morning, whether hearing from hiking enthusiasts who urged silence from off-road-vehicle users or taking complaints from four-wheeler buffs who say accessible roads are rapidly vanishing.

Although he cut short some commentators in the first session of the Salt Lake City Great Outdoors Initiative and told others to simply ask their questions, Salazar made it clear he wants to tap local, public opinion as his blueprint for the Interior Department's management strategy.

Read more... [Ken Salazar says local conservation approach should be blueprint for future]
 

Letter: Mere wrist slaps

PDF Print E-mail
Written by Salt Lake Tribune   
Friday, July 23, 2010
The (non)sentences recently handed down to several San Juan County residents arrested in Blanding last year for theft and trafficking of Native American artifacts illustrate just how immune the local citizenry is to being held accountable for crimes committed on federal lands (“Blanding man sentenced in relics case,” Tribune, July 13).

Whether it’s pot hunting for profit, destroying or removing road and trail signs and barriers on public lands, or constructing illegal all-terrain-vehicle trails across archaeological sites in remote canyons, the good folks down there have learned that they have nothing to fear from certain U.S. courts.

 

Read more... [Letter: Mere wrist slaps]
 

Editorial: Culture of the past

PDF Print E-mail
Written by Salt Lake Tribune   
Monday, July 12, 2010
The ancient Indian dwellings, relics and art left behind by some of the earliest residents of what is now eastern and southern Utah have survived the ravages of time for thousands of years. But many of them will not outlast an invasion of vandals riding all-terrain vehicles.

The Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance is rightly asking the Bureau of Land Management to take another look at its Bush-era decision to allow ATVs to roam through unique archaeological sites and ecologically sensitive lands. The BLM should comply.

 

Read more... [Editorial: Culture of the past]
 

ATVs threatening 10 Utah ‘treasures’

PDF Print E-mail
Written by Salt Lake Tribune   
Friday, July 09, 2010

Brandon Loomis

Off-roaders and energy developers are threatening Factory Butte, Desolation Canyon, Dirty Devil Country and seven other Utah spots — along with the scenic and archaeological wonders they hold — according to a report Thursday by the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance.

Together, these 10 places make up SUWA’s list of the state’s “most threatened wilderness treasures.”

Read more... [ATVs threatening 10 Utah ‘treasures’]
 

Column: San Juan County wilderness protection is vital to all Utahns

PDF Print E-mail
Written by Deseret News   
Sunday, June 20, 2010

George Handley and Stephen Trimble

Sen. Bob Bennett rightly takes pride in last year's Washington County lands bill, which brought competing interests to the table and earned their support to protect permanently 256,000 acres of wilderness. Now, as the end of his term approaches, Bennett is working in San Juan County to craft similar comprehensive legislation.

This moment can lead to real protection for America's red rock wilderness. Good legislation can reverse the decisions of the Bush administration that allow degradation of this irreplaceable landscape with increased off-road vehicle routes and rash and unnecessary natural resource development. But we worry that artificial haste and insufficient public input may lead to an inadequate bill.

Read more... [Column: San Juan County wilderness protection is vital to all Utahns]
 
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next > End >>

Page 3 of 11

State by State Momentum

Community Voices

“During the past decade, I have personally had six out of seven elk hunts ruined by the careless intrusions of ATV operators. This epidemic has forced me to abandon one prime hunting area after another, only to encounter the same situation elsewhere. The shameful part of this picture is that the overwhelming majority of these ATV’ers are young and healthy, not decrepit or physically challenged. Maybe these riders would be more respectful of other people's outdoor experience if they knew we could ID them."

- Bill Sustrich, Colorado Backcountry Hunters and Anglers