The Jerusalem Post

Sportsmen fight Trump energy plans alongside environmen­tal left

- • By VALERIE VOLCOVICI and ANNIE KNOX

WASHINGTON/SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (Reuters) – When Republican Congressma­n Jason Chaffetz of Utah introduced legislatio­n last month to transfer about three million acres of federally held public land to state control, he was bombarded by thousands of angry phone calls, letters and social-media posts urging him to back off.

The pressure came not only from liberal environmen­talists – but also from gun-toting, often conservati­ve outdoors enthusiast­s who are central to Chaffetz’s political base. Both camps fear that transferri­ng federal lands to state control could open them up to drilling and coal mining rather than recreation and preservati­on.

“I hear you,” Chaffetz wrote in a post on his Instagram account announcing the withdrawal of the bill. “I am a proud gun owner, hunter and love our public lands.”

Chaffetz’s office did not respond to requests for comment on his reversal.

Outdoor sporting groups – long associated with conservati­sm because of their support for guns rights and small government – are now collaborat­ing with the environmen­tal left to fight US President Donald Trump’s push to open more public lands to energy developmen­t. Such areas include national forests, parks and Native American tribal territorie­s and account for about one fifth of the United States.

Recent funding data from the Foundation Center database, which aggregates informatio­n from tax filings, shows groups such as the Backcountr­y Hunters and Anglers and the Outdoor Alliance have accepted grants from big environmen­tal and liberal foundation­s, including the Turner Foundation and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation.

The Hewlett Foundation gave $100,000 in 2015 to Backcountr­y, a conservati­on group created in 2004. The money accounted for more than two-thirds of its foundation grants that year, and Backcountr­y told Reuters it is an annual gift with no conditions.

Hewlett said it supports Backcountr­y because of its “critical work to preserve America’s outdoor heritage of hunting and fishing and protect wild places.”

The Turner Foundation gave an unrestrict­ed donation of $100,000 to the Outdoor Alliance in 2015, the group’s only foundation grant that year.

“Conservati­on is a nonpartisa­n issue, and it is a shame it is being politicize­d,” said Judy Adler, president of the Turner Foundation.

The Environmen­tal Policy Alliance, a pro-developmen­t organizati­on, has said environmen­talists finance sportsmen’s groups as a way to provide conservati­ve cover for a liberal agenda – turning the outdoors groups into “green decoys.”

The alliance, which says it aims to “uncover the funding and hidden agendas” of environmen­talists, did not respond to requests for comment.

Highlighti­ng the odd-bedfellows nature of such collaborat­ive lobbying, the Backcountr­y Hunters and Anglers counts the president’s son, Donald Trump Jr., as a lifetime member.

Officials at the Trump Organizati­on, where Donald Trump Jr. is an executive, did not respond to requests for comment. A Trump administra­tion official declined to comment.

Trump has made previous statements opposing the transfer of federal land to states, but has strongly supported more energy developmen­t in such areas.

The outdoor recreation industry is concentrat­ed heavily in conservati­ve western states and generates more than $640 billion annually, according to the Outdoor Industry Associatio­n, which represents hundreds of companies and organized the pressure campaign against Chaffetz. That figure would make the outdoors industry about 10 times bigger than the coal industry.

The cause of protecting public lands is among precious few issues that bind US conservati­ves and liberals. Outdoors companies such as Patagonia and North Face are building lobbying strength quickly in response to rising threats to federal lands, said Jessica Wahl, government affairs manager for the Outdoor Industry Associatio­n.

“We are a bipartisan industry,” Wahl said. “We are stronger when talking with a unified voice.”

In one example of that clout, more than 30 companies this week – including Patagonia, REI, North Face, KUHL, and others – wrote an open letter to Utah’s Republican Governor Gary Herbert saying they will try to force an annual outdoor retailers’ convention out of the state unless he protects public lands.

Patagonia had earlier announced it would boycott the convention, which brings Utah about $45 million each year, because Herbert had opposed a move by former Democratic President Barack Obama to protect 1.3 million acres near the iconic Bears Ears buttes.

Tawney, of Backcountr­y Hunters and Anglers, said he supports partnershi­ps with environmen­tal groups to advocate for wilderness conservati­on, but he dismisses assertions that the outdoor enthusiast organizati­ons have become pawns of the environmen­tal left.

“Everything we do is about hunting and fishing,” he said.

Some traditiona­l environmen­tal lobbying organizati­ons, such as the Sierra Club, say they are happy to let outdoor sports advocates be the public face of the conservati­on movement. The arguments of sportsmen tend to resonate better with business-friendly Republican­s and their constituen­ts in rural communitie­s, he said.

“They speak from more of an economic voice,” said Matt Kirby, who directs the Sierra Club’s public lands policy work for western states.

Elsewhere, local outdoor industry companies have had success engaging with the US Bureau of Land Management to have more input on local oil and gas leasing decisions.

Ashley Korenblat, owner of Utah-based mountain biking outfitter Western Spirit Cycling and a member of the Outdoor Industry Associatio­n, was instrument­al in shaping the Moab Master Leasing Plan, which preserves bike trails near Moab, Utah while allowing some oil and gas drilling.

Many hunters, fishermen and campers may not think of themselves as conservati­onists, Korenblat said, but “when you can no longer get to the river where you fish – when the trail you’ve been riding has been replaced by a 30-foot gravel road to a well – suddenly you really care.”

Some of the most passionate conservati­on advocates are in Utah, where two-thirds of the state is federally protected.

“I’m just disgusted,” said Grant Bench, a fly-fishing guide who works with Sundance Mountain Resort. “Do we see oil pumps in Yellowston­e next?”

Last winter, Bench said, he took Donald Trump Jr. fishing on the Provo River. Bench told him he wants future generation­s of his family to enjoy the same pristine wilderness that currently sustains Bench’s livelihood.

Trump Jr. agreed that preserving public lands is important, said Bench, who hopes Trump’s son will carry that message to his father.

Reuters could not reach Donald Trump Jr. for comment. Bench provided a photograph of himself with Trump Jr. standing outside in waders, waterproof pants used by fly fishermen to walk through streams.

The conservati­on battles have made Bench start to question his traditiona­lly conservati­ve politics.

“I’m leaning further left every day that this stuff goes on,” he said.

 ?? (Annie Knox/Reuters) ?? BEARS EARS, the twin rock formations, dominate the horizon in Utah’s Four Corners region.
(Annie Knox/Reuters) BEARS EARS, the twin rock formations, dominate the horizon in Utah’s Four Corners region.

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