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Zinke fancies himself a mountain man, but as Interior Secretary he's working to destroy the wild places he claims to love.
Zinke fancies himself a mountain man, but as Interior Secretary he's working to destroy the wild places he claims to love.
Indefinitely Wild

The Lies in the Secret National Monuments Memo

Ryan Zinke's report to Donald Trump recommending alterations to 10 national monuments is based on a pack of falsehoods. Here we break down the worst ones.

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Over the weekend, the Associated Press and The Washington Post published Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke sent to President Trump detailing the findings of his four-month review of national monument designations. Not intended for public eyes, the report details 10 monuments Zinke thinks should be altered. That鈥檚 important information, but what strikes me as most interesting聽is the length Zinke聽goes to justify聽such actions鈥攐ften resorting to downright lies. Let鈥檚 take a look at the most egregious聽whoppers.

Trump Has Authority to聽Alter Monuments

鈥淭here is no doubt that President Trump has the authority to review and consider recommendations to modify or add a monument,鈥 Zinke writes.

There鈥檚 actually a ton聽of doubt. It鈥檚 widely accepted that the Antiquities Act grants a President the authority to create monuments, but聽the law聽doesn鈥檛 actually contain language authorizing a president to modify an existing聽monument鈥檚 parameters, let alone abolish聽it all together.聽While presidents have altered monuments before, none of those changes have been challenged in court. That will likely聽change this time around.听

That鈥檚 not to say that there is no mechanism for modifying the national monuments. There is, legally, through an act of Congress.

Previous Monuments Were Created Without Public Consultation鈥

Zinke set out to review monuments created since 1996 that were over 100,000 acres in size 鈥渙r were made without adequate public consultation.鈥

What did public consultation for the creation of monuments like Bears聽Ears look like? Former Interior Secretary Sally Jewel detailed just that in a recent interview with High Country News. She describes . 鈥淭o say voices were not heard is not true,鈥 she states.

鈥nd Zinke Fixed That

鈥溾he second step [in Zinke鈥檚 review] was to ensure that the local voice was heard by holding meetings with local, state, tribal, another elected officials; non-profit groups; and other stakeholders, as well as providing an online format for public comment.鈥

To suggest that Zinke鈥檚 four-month review of 26 monument was somehow more thorough than the years-long processes that went into judging the merits of each monuments鈥 creation is ridiculous. In fact, many groups that were consulted during the initial creation process were left out of Zinke鈥檚 review, despite requesting meetings. Records demonstrate that Zinke spent more time meeting with oil companies than he did with Native American groups聽when it came to Bears Ears, for instance.

Public Comments Are Divided

鈥淧ublic comments can be divided into two principal groups,鈥 writes Zinke. He goes on to mostly dismiss the arguments of people who commented pro-monument and to give entirely unjustified weight to the anti-monument comments.

The thing is, the public opinion delivered during the four-month comment period could not be clearer鈥攐ver 2.8 million people participated in the process, and 99.2 percent of the comments were in favor of preserving the monuments.

Giving equal weight to a 99.2-to-0.8 percent divide is textbook false equivalency. The American people spoke, and their message was clear.

The GOP Doesn't Want to Sell Public Land

Zinke聽constantly dismisses the idea that the GOP鈥檚 official policy is to steal our public lands.听鈥淧roponents [of keeping our monuments] tended to promote monument designation as a mechanism to prevent the sale or transfer of public land,鈥 Zinke鈥檚 memo states. 鈥淭his narrative is false and has no basis in fact.鈥

And yet his party is currently engaged in efforts to sell or transfer public land. Just last week, a bill was introduced to Congress that proposed transferring management of federal lands to individual states in an effort to allow the oil and gas industries to circumvent federal laws like the Endangered Species Act.

Again, if that's not clear enough,聽: 鈥淐ongress shall immediately pass universal legislation providing for a timely and orderly mechanism requiring the federal government to convey certain federally controlled public lands to states.鈥

Most Comments Came From NGOs

鈥淐omments received were overwhelmingly in favor of maintaining existing monuments and demonstrated a well-orchestrated national campaign organized by multiple organizations,鈥 reads the memo. 鈥淭he DOI received approximately 2.6 million form comments associated with NGO-organized campaigns, which far outnumbered individual comments鈥oo often it is the local stakeholders who lack the organization, funding, and institutional support to compete with well-funded NGOs.鈥

Of course NGOs encouraged people to comment鈥斺攂ut these campaigns were often on a very small scale.听I鈥檓 friends with the leader of one such NGO who聽advocated strongly for a public-comment period on the monuments review. His name is Brent Rose, he lives in a van,聽and he thought generating public comments on the review was so important that he drove that聽van to all the land-based monuments threatened by Zinke鈥檚 review, shooting聽photos and videos of each for social media. In two months, he covered more than 6,000 miles.听Contrast Brent鈥檚 efforts .

To suggest that 99.2 percent鈥2.6 million鈥攐f the comments about the review were a聽result of an 鈥淣GO-organized campaign鈥 is simply ridiculous.听

Monuments Are Supposed to Be Smaller

Throughout the memo, Zinke makes repeated mention of the Antiquities Act鈥檚 requirement that monuments cover the 鈥渟mallest area possible鈥 required to protect the designated objects. This is his chief justification for recommending size reductions for 10 monuments. 鈥淭hese recommended modifications are intended to ensure that the monuments meet the purposes of the Act, including that the area reserved be limited to the smallest area compatible with the acre and management of the objects to be protected,鈥 Zinke writes.

But the monuments in question are already sized for the specific purpose of protecting the natural and cultural resources聽in question. Let鈥檚 again use Bears Ears as an example. . That size can鈥檛 possibly encompass . The Obama administration spent years documenting these sites, in contrast to Zinke鈥檚 whirlwind tour. The monument designation was made only after Native American Interests campaigned for it for years, yet .

Increased Visitation Burdens Federal Government

鈥淢onument status has a potential economic benefit of increased visitation, particularly to service related industries, outdoor recreation industries, and other businesses dependent or supported by tourism,鈥 states Zinke in the memo, building up to a caveat. 鈥淚ncreased visitation also places an additional burden and responsibility on the Federal Government to provide addition resources and manpower to maintain these lands to better support increased visitation and recreation activities.鈥

Managing national monuments聽does cost the feds鈥攕pecifically聽the National Park Service, the U.S. Forest Service, the聽Fish and Wildlife Service, and the Bureau of Land Management鈥攎oney.听But the聽combined annual budget for all those organizations is $12.2 billion, and only a small portion of that total will go to management of monuments. And that聽cost is far outweighed by the federal tax contribution of the outdoor industry, which . Increased visitation benefits the federal budget, it doesn鈥檛 burden it.

Hunters and Fishermen Oppose the Monuments聽

Throughout the memo, Zinke states that monuments restrict “traditional uses” and cites hunting and fishing as one example of user groups that have suffered. In fact,聽hunters and fishermen are the most vocal group in opposing the alteration of these monuments. Backcountry Hunters and Anglers is running a TV spot in Zinke鈥檚 native Montana, calling on him to leave our monuments intact.

Monuments Hurt Local Economies

鈥淭he DOI has certainly heard that monument designations bring increased tourism, and therefore revenue, to some local businesses, as well as jobs,鈥 Zinke writes. 鈥淪ome of the monuments under review have resulted in this activity. However, in some instances the jobs and revenues resulting from tourism do not necessarily offset the lost or forgone revenue resulting from the limitations placed on land development.”聽

The assertion that monument designations hurt local economies does not hold water. Western counties with at least 100,000 acres of protected public lands have an average per capita income. Communities with protected public lands also have than those without.

Take for example Cascade-Siskiyou聽National Monument. Since it was created in 2000, it's聽 to surrounding rural communities. Then there's Arizona鈥檚 Ironwood Forest that, since 2000, has .听

Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument has added to the local economy an聽 since Bill Clinton designated the monument in 1996鈥攁 fact聽Zinke聽might know if he聽had actually met聽with the Escalante Chamber of Commerce when he toured the region.听

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