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Protecting Utah's Redrock Country
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Your support paired with SUWA’s deep expertise i Your support paired with SUWA’s deep expertise is a powerful combination—one that ensures that the preservation of the outstanding wilderness at the heart of the Colorado Plateau is not just a mission statement, but a vision for the future that we’re working towards every day.

Please consider a donation to support SUWA's work on #GivingTuesday. Visit suwa.org/donate or tap link in bio. Thank you!
This holiday season, give the gift of unique appar This holiday season, give the gift of unique apparel and accessories that are not only stylish but also express your love for wilderness. 🎁 New items this year include fanny packs, t-shirts, hats, and party shirts featuring our special 40th anniversary logo. 

Ensure your gifts arrive on time by ordering before December 1st for Hanukkah and by December 8th for Christmas. Each purchase you make supports our mission to protect the redrock! Visit our online store at suwa.org/goodies or see link in bio to browse our full selection of SUWA swag.
📢 Calling all dark sky enthusiasts! 🌌 On Tue 📢 Calling all dark sky enthusiasts! 🌌 On Tuesday, December 5 from 7-8 pm PST join "Slickrock and Dark Skies: Two Views of Utah Wilderness” from anywhere with an internet connection!

This presentation is co-sponsored by Oregonians For Wild Utah and Washington Friends of Wild Utah. Attendees will learn about the wonder and beauty of the Colorado Plateau day and night with a focus on Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument.

Presenters: Stephen Hinch (Author/Photographer) and Lisa Stoner (Utah State University/Colorado Plateau and Basin & Range Dark Sky Cooperatives).

Free, but please register in advance using the link in our bio.
Capitol Hill Update: Last week, Rep. John Curtis ( Capitol Hill Update: Last week, Rep. John Curtis (R-UT-3) introduced H.R.6396, the companion to S.3148, Sen. Mike Lee’s (R-UT) bill that would prohibit the BLM from implementing the recently finalized travel management plan for the Labyrinth Canyon area (pictured is Bowknot Bend and the Green River) near Moab, and has implications for future travel plans in Utah.

As we’ve said many times before: this much-needed travel plan for the Labyrinth Canyon region will guide land management decisions on a 300,000-acre landscape for years to come. It will help protect cultural sites, riparian habitat, and the experience of non-motorized recreationists while allowing for motorized recreation on more than 800 miles of dirt trails and routes. The BLM has taken an important step in balancing the recreational use of the landscape (both motorized and human-powered) and the conservation of ecological and cultural resources.

Rep. Curtis’s bill would buck the support of local businesses and local elected officials that support this plan. It also ignores the balanced approach to recreation and conservation taken by the Bureau of Land Management, the agency who prepared this plan. Representative Curtis’s bill makes it clear that he would rather see out-of-control motorized use prioritized over all other public land uses, regardless of the damage caused.

In short, H.R.6396, just like S.3148, is anti-conservation, pro-resource destruction, and dead-on-arrival. Read more about the travel management plan for the Labyrinth Canyon area using the link in our bio.
40th Anniversary #tbt Flashback! In early 2016, Ut 40th Anniversary #tbt Flashback! In early 2016, Utah Rep. Rob Bishop unveiled a draft of his truly awful Public Lands Initiative (PLI). Touted as a conservation measure, its real goal was to crush the burgeoning movement to establish a Bears Ears National Monument.

The PLI was one of the worst “wilderness” bills we’d seen in Utah since the Wilderness Act of 1964 was passed into law. It contained a laundry list of provisions that would roll back existing protections on over 100,000 acres of BLM wilderness study areas and 70,000 acres of natural areas (managed to protect wilderness values), transfer federal public land to the state of Utah, shift control of energy development permitting to the state, and permanently establish grazing and motorized use in sensitive areas. It also failed to protect as wilderness such iconic Utah landscapes as White Canyon, Hatch Point, and the Mussentuchit Badlands.

Over 600 Utahns packed a hearing organized by the Utah Wilderness Coalition, with speaker after speaker decrying the PLI as a disaster for Utah’s public lands. Mark Maryboy of Utah Diné Bikéyah described how the Utah delegation refused to seriously engage with Native Americans seeking protection for Bears Ears.
 
By summer, Reps. Bishop and Chaffetz had introduced the bill into Congress. At a House subcommittee hearing, the BLM, the U.S. Forest Service, and the Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition all testified against the measure. Thankfully, though it passed the stacked House Resources Committee on a party line vote, it never received a vote on the House Floor. 

“. . . [I]t’s clear that Representative Bishop’s PLI was not a serious effort to pass legislation, but an attempt to run out the clock and delay the protection of Bears Ears as a national monument by President Obama,” said SUWA Executive Director Scott Groene in a statement. “Now that Rep. Bishop has utterly failed to deliver on years of promises to safeguard this region from looting and industrial development, it is time for President Obama to step in where Congress has failed and protect Bears Ears as a national monument.”

We’ve come a long way together—thanks for being part of the Utah wilderness movement!
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425 East 100 South
Salt Lake City, UT 84111
(801) 486-3161

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122 C Street, NW Suite 650
Washington, DC 20001
(202) 546-2215

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P.O. Box 968
Moab, UT 84532

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