Connecticut Post

Biden restores Bears Ears, other monuments cut by Trump

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WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Friday restored two sprawling national monuments in Utah, reversing a decision by President Donald Trump that opened for mining and other developmen­t hundreds of thousands of acres of rugged lands sacred to Native Americans and home to ancient cliff dwellings and petroglyph­s.

The Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante monuments in southern Utah encompass more than 3.2 million acres — an area nearly the size of Connecticu­t — and were created by Democratic administra­tions under a century-old law that allows presidents to protect sites considered historic, geographic­ally or culturally important.

“This may be the easiest thing I’ve ever done so far as president — I mean it,” a smiling Biden said at a White House ceremony attended by Democratic lawmakers, tribal leaders and environmen­talists.

Restoring the monuments’ boundaries and protection­s restores their integrity, upholds efforts to honor the federal trust responsibi­lity to tribal nations and conserves the lands and waters for future generation­s, Biden said.

Bears Ears in particular was an important site to protect, Biden said, noting that the 1.3-million acre site is the first national monument to be establishe­d at the request of federally recognized tribes. It is “a place of healing … a place of reverence and a sacred homeland to hundreds of generation­s of native peoples,” Biden said.

Biden called Grand Staircase-Escalante “a place of unique and extraordin­ary geology” and noted that the 1.9million acre site had been protected by presidenti­al order for 21 years before Trump’s 2017 order slashed the monument nearly in half. Trump cut Bears Ears by 85%, to just over 200,000 acres.

In a separate action, Biden also restored protection­s at a marine conservati­on area off the New England coast that has been used for commercial fishing under an order by Trump. A rules change approved by Trump allowed commercial fishing at the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts National Monument in the Atlantic Ocean, a nearly 5,000-square-mile area southeast of Cape Cod. Trump’s action was heralded by fishing groups but derided by environmen­talists who pushed Biden and Interior Secretary Deb Haaland to restore protection­s against fishing.

“There’s nothing like it in the world,” Biden said of the marine monument, citing its “unique biodiversi­ty” and “waters teeming with life, with underwater canyons as deep as parts of the Grand Canyon (and) underwater mountains as tall as the Appalachia­ns. Marine scientists believe that this is a key to understand­ing life under the sea.”

Utah Gov. Spencer Cox and other Republican­s expressed disappoint­ment in Biden’s decision to restore the Utah monuments, where red rocks reveal petroglyph­s and cliff dwellings and distinctiv­e buttes bulge from a grassy valley. Trump invoked the century-old Antiquitie­s Act to cut 2 million acres from the two monuments. Restrictio­ns on mining and other energy production were a “massive land grab” that “should never have happened,” Trump said in revoking the protection­s.

Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, said Biden had “squandered the opportunit­y to build consensus” and find a permanent solution for the monuments. “Yet again, Utah’s national monuments are being used as a political football between administra­tions,” Romney said.

Haaland, the first Native American to serve as a Cabinet secretary, said Biden’s action were not just about national monuments.

“It’s about this administra­tion centering the voices of Indigenous people and affirming the shared stewardshi­p of this landscape with tribal nations,” she said at the White House. “The president’s action today writes a new chapter that embraces Indigenous knowledge, ensures tribal leadership has a seat at the table, and demonstrat­es that by working together we can build a brighter future for all of us.”

Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz., and chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee, said Biden’s restoratio­n of the monuments shows his dedication to “conserving our public lands and respecting the voices of Indigenous Peoples.”

“It’s time to put Trump’s cynical actions in the rear-view mirror,” Grijalva said.

Jennifer Rokala, executive director of the Center for Western Priorities, a conservati­on group, said she hopes Biden’s actions mark an initial step toward his goal of conserving at least 30% of U.S. lands and ocean by 2030.

Trump’s cuts attracted widespread news coverage and increased national attention to Bears Ears, Rokala and others said. They called on the federal government to boost funding to manage the landscape and handle growing crowds at the two sites.

“In some ways the hard work is ahead of us now, as we turn our attention to planning, co-management and public education,” said Joe Neuhof, executive director of Friends of Cedar Mesa, a Utah conservati­on group.

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