Los Angeles Times

Land dispute may block beloved trail

- BY DAVID MONTERO david.montero@latimes.com Twitter: @davemonter­o

SPRINGDALE, Utah — The two of them walked slowly in the middle of the ice-cold river, bundled in layers and using their walking sticks to probe the rocky bed for safe footing.

Annie Kitchen had wanted to do this hike for years. So had Rama Rauitalai.

“Nature. Solitude. Quiet,” Rauitalai said in a voice so soft it was nearly drowned out by the water’s steady current. Above them, the sky was periwinkle and the sun promised more warmth than it was delivering.

They had begun the topdown hike of the Narrows at Zion National Park in Utah in early November because permits were easier to obtain. During the summer, it’s a lottery system. Only 90 people are allowed through the hike daily and the permits are reserved months in advance. During the winter, snow and cold make access to the trailhead at Chamberlai­n Ranch mostly inaccessib­le to hikers.

“We’d been to Zion before, but never done the Narrows,” said Kitchen, 34, of Phoenix. “I’d heard stories and seen pictures and it looked amazing.”

But Kitchen and Rauitalai, also from Phoenix, could be among the last few people to hike the top-down 16-mile route through the Narrows unless a dispute between a private property owner and the federal government is resolved by a Dec. 31 deadline.

Local resident Scott Bulloch owns hundreds of acres of land that is cut by the Virgin River and, for about 50 years, he and his family have allowed hikers to traverse through it on their way to the Temple of Sinawava, one of the park’s most popular destinatio­ns.

Bulloch’s attorney, Barry Clarkson, said the family had wanted a permanent solution to the public-private land issue and a few years ago asked whether the federal government would like to purchase it or set up a conservati­on easement.

Government officials were agreeable to the idea.

The property includes Simon Gulch, a spectacula­r canyon of walls smoothed by millions of years of wind and river water. There are tall trees and hidden wildlife that include mountain lions, bighorn sheep and ringtail cats.

It’s a place that was made for photograph­y before cameras were ever imagined, but years ago it became the Bullochs’ backyard.

Christophe­r Hansen, a Park City-based appraiser who was commission­ed by the Trust for Public Land, a nonprofit group, to come up with a price for the 880 acres, spent time at Simon Gulch and surveyed the raw land during the summer.

Hansen factored in the most spectacula­r scenery as well as acreage best used by grazing cattle. He thought he’d nailed down a price everyone would agree upon and delivered the dollar figure in the summer.

The U.S. Forest Service, which had the final say, rejected it, startling Hansen, who has decades of appraisal experience. The Trust for Public Land was chagrined the process had stalled. The Bulloch family was not happy either.

“That was upsetting to my clients,” Clarkson said.

Up went signs warning about trespassin­g and down went hopes of an immediate resolution.

National Park Service officials stopped issuing permits for the top-down hike. Springdale-based companies that shuttled people up to the Chamberlai­n Ranch trailhead to do the hike worried about lost revenue amid a prolonged closure.

Eager to resolve the issue, officials from Washington County offered to help mediate the dispute and Bulloch agreed to take down the signs, meaning access through Simon Gulch would be permissibl­e through the end of the year.

A new firm is doing an appraisal of the Bulloch property and is expected to provide its findings in mid-December. Because the Hansen appraisal wasn’t accepted by the Forest Service, its dollar figure was not made public.

Susanne Tracy, spokeswoma­n for the Forest Service, said in an email that her agency had completed a technical review of Hansen’s appraisal to determine whether it complied with the Uniform Appraisal Standards for Federal Land Acquisitio­ns and found it did not.

“The Forest Service ... disapprove­d the appraisal as the basis for acquisitio­n of the Simon Gulch easement,” Tracy wrote.

Hansen said in a phone interview that the government was smearing his reputation and making the Bullochs out to be unreasonab­le and unwilling sellers. They aren’t, he said. “I view the government as being oppressive in this process and don’t want to pay the fair price,” Hansen said.

Zion National Park, which celebrated its 99th birthday this year, was establishe­d as Utah’s first national park by President Woodrow Wilson, but it has long had some access-point disputes.

Greg Hiner, southwest director of land protection for the Trust for Public Land, said the organizati­on has been trying to assist in establishi­ng conservati­on easements throughout Zion National Park’s 147,000 acres for several years. Last month, the trust announced a donation to the National Park Service of a 35-acre inholding known as Firepit Knoll in the Kolob Terrace. That purchase will protect it from future developmen­t.

Hiner said access to the Narrows is a high priority for everyone given its popularity. In 2013, the trust worked out a conservati­on easement deal with the owners of the Chamberlai­n Ranch trailhead to provide access into the canyon. He said he remains hopeful a deal can be worked out with the Bullochs.

“I think everybody wants to see it done — and I include the Bulloch family in that,” Hiner said.

But for a few days in September, some outdoor outfitting companies that shuttle people to the Chamberlai­n Ranch trailhead saw what things might look like if a resolution isn’t reached before the snow melts and spring hikers start arriving at Zion.

Andy Gonyou, a hiking guide with Zion Guru, said when the signs went up, it provided an ominous glimpse of what could be. He worried that prospectiv­e hikers could be scared away.

“A lot of people travel literally from all over the world” to hike the Narrows, he said, “so if you have your set time, and it was closed those five days, people didn’t necessaril­y have the flexibilit­y in their schedule to do it a different day.”

Tim Knaus, a park ranger who has made the hike several times, said each time he goes out, he finds a new grotto or cave that he’d missed before. In the summer, he said, the cool water from the river provides welcome relief from the tripledigi­t heat that can warm the canyons. What the park offers, Knaus said, is a connection to nature and a place of peace in the midst of a loud, busy world. A place, he said, he would like accessible to everyone.

“The parks provide perspectiv­e,” he said.

The Bullochs say they too want the public to be able to access the Narrows through the top-down hike. Scott Bulloch, who declined an interview with The Times, told the Salt Lake Tribune last month that the issue involves a matter of fairness.

“When the Forest Service people came down and looked at the [Simon Gulch] property, they said this land is priceless. Yet they don’t want to give us anything for it,” Bulloch said. “You can’t compare it with neighborin­g ranch land because it is the only property with the Zion Narrows.”

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? ANNIE KITCHEN, left, and Rama Rauitalai walk in the Virgin River during their top-down hike of the Narrows at Zion National Park in Utah.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ANNIE KITCHEN, left, and Rama Rauitalai walk in the Virgin River during their top-down hike of the Narrows at Zion National Park in Utah.

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