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HOME arrow BLOG arrow Utah Bill - A pig with lipstick
Utah Bill - A pig with lipstick
Written by Scott Silver   
Thursday, 17 April 2008

In yesterday's Salt Lake Tribune, Tom Wharton's appeared under the headline "Public-lands bill may look better, but it's still a pig." His column is about Utah's proposed "Washington County Growth & Conservation Act of 2008" — a wilderness bill cut from shoddy cloth — and what, until recently, would have been deemed "unusually shoddy cloth." Unfortunately, our standards have fallen so low there is little that is unusual about this particular pig. Wharton focuses his attention upon land sale provisions within this so-called "Wilderness" bill. He calls upon the conservation community and specifically upon 'national environmental groups' to oppose this bill. Wild Wilderness is with Wharton.

I'd like to add one thought not mentioned by Wharton. As a direct consequence of the Milton Friedmanesque 'Shock Doctrine' and the economic crisis now being inflicted upon the citizens of America by our elected leaders, we will soon be asked to sell off and/or privatize virtually every asset held in common, including our public lands. In that regard, America stands poised to become the next Pinochet's Chile.

Some will say, "nonsense, that will never happen." Others will say, "well perhaps just a little privatization would be okay, so long as the price is right and the money is well spent".

To both groups, I offer this thought:

At a fancy London dinner party, George Bernard Shaw is reputed to have asked Lady Astor, in front of others, if she would spend the night with him for a million pounds.

"Why yes Mr. Shaw, I suppose I would," she replied.

To which Shaw responded: "Well then, how about five pounds?"

"Mr. Shaw," the suddenly indignant Madame Astor retorted. "What do you think I am?"

"I've established that," Shaw replied. "What I am trying to establish now is the price."

With the era of mass, wholesale, privatization of America and its heritage laying before us, now is not the time for conservationists to be stepping onto this avalanche slope.  Or to use a different metaphor, now is not the time to be distracted with the temptation to pinch pawns -- not when we are threatened with almost imminent check-mate.

Scott 

--- begin quoted ---

Wharton: Public-lands bill may look better, but it's still a pig
By Tom Wharton Tribune Columnist 04/16/2008


When it comes to public land management, anything hatched in Nevada is almost always guaranteed to be bad.

That is, after all, the state that launched the Sagebrush Rebellion to privatize public lands in the 1970s. It's where activists blazed an illegal road to protest closures on national forest property near Elko. Las Vegas' ongoing attempt to steal water from Utah's west desert could have negative effects on Fish Springs National Wildlife Refuge and the Great Salt Lake.

In the past few years, with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid calling the shots, some public lands around burgeoning Las Vegas have been sold. Reid's sale of public lands no doubt got Sen. Bob Bennett, R-Utah, and Rep. Jim Matheson, D-Utah, thinking. They are again proposing to sell off Bureau of Land Management property in Washington County and the St. George area, a bad idea whether near Las Vegas or in Utah.

The pair's Washington County Growth & Conservation Act of 2008 would designate 264,000 acres of new wilderness, much of it in already protected Zion National Park, as well as designating 166 miles of wild and scenic rivers.

In exchange, the BLM could sell 9,052 acres of public lands in Washington County with 5 percent of the proceeds going to schools, 10 percent to the county and 85 percent for conservation.

While slightly improved from an earlier version and gaining support from some conservation organizations, the bill is still akin to trying to make a pig look better by dressing it up. The proposal has two major problems.

First, it continues the bad precedent of selling off public lands.

One of the great things about Utah, whether you are a backpacker, dirt bike rider, mountain biker or camper, is the abundance of public lands open to such activities.

Once politicians, hungry to increase tax bases by aiding developers looking to build in these areas, start selling off these lands, they are gone to public use forever. Since the land is often close to urban areas losing open space, it's all the more valuable.

And, in times of huge budget deficits such as the one we're facing due to President Bush's and Congress' disastrous policies, there will be continued temptation to sell these lands for a quick fix without regard to the long-term consequences to public access and the environment.

The second concern is growth. Washington County and St. George are among the fastest-growing places in the country. Utah taxpayers are being asked to pay for a massive and expensive pipeline project to bring water from Lake Powell.

That's part of a bigger Western problem where places such as Phoenix, Las Vegas, St. George and Southern California are relying on the increasingly stressed Colorado River and underground aquifers for water. No one knows when there will no longer be enough water to sustain this desert development, but why make it easier for these places to grow?

While these arguments will likely fall on deaf ears of Utah politicians, the only hope is that national environmental groups will press Congress to reject this and other attempts to sell public lands so they can remain open to myriad recreational activities.

Comments (1) >>

Davian said:

  We gotta big problem Scott. We've become so inured to corruption in the news, the last bastion of defense standing between the corporations and the commons is seeing fit to subscribe to the hapless adage, "When in Rome, do as the Romans do." Cut the deal with a wink and a nudge, bask in the media limelight heralding the miracles of compromise and collaboration...

Then again, think of the limitless opportunities, such as the Sierra Club signing a deal with Chlorox? A little SC brand recognition for a cut of the proceeds off a green line of products? Hell, yeah! Remove the protesters! "Next?"

Sorta reminds me of NRDC's upper echelon pushing Enron's green scams with the urging of the Ford Foundation. Another one of those "win-win" propositions.

Congress' self-proclaimed "King of Pork" is in the national news again today breaking trail as the first ever Congressman investigated for changing an earmark after passage of a bill. That's my Rep! The only one we get in the largest state in the union. There's a LOT more incidents to mention around such rich history, but more to the heart of the matter -- What do we the constituents DO about it? Simple.

Ask,"What's in it for me?"

And like a plague of locusts descending upon the wild west, the pigs on the wing soon had devoured all that remained of our principles. Okay then, time to go to sleep kids!
April 17, 2008
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