The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

What’s a national monument?

- By John Flesher The Associated Press

U.S. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke is recommendi­ng boundary revisions for some national monuments but no eliminatio­ns. President Donald Trump ordered Zinke to conduct an unpreceden­ted review of 27 monuments establishe­d by former presidents over more than two decades on lands revered for their natural beauty and historical significan­ce.

Zinke isn’t providing details of his plan, beyond proposals disclosed earlier to downsize the Bears Ears monument in Utah and leave six others unchanged. He also says no monuments would be eliminated. Still, any move by Trump to slim down monuments may trigger legal showdowns over whether one chief executive can undo or modify another’s decisions about them.

A closer look at the issues:

WHAT IS A NATIONAL MONUMENT?

The 1906 Antiquitie­s Act, enacted under President Theodore Roosevelt, empowers the president to declare as national monuments any landmarks, structures and other “objects of historic or scientific interest” on land owned or controlled by the federal government. Roosevelt establishe­d 18 monuments, including the Grand Canyon in Arizona and Devil’s Tower in Wyoming. Most presidents since then have designated additional monuments. Congress has created others.

Most monuments are overseen by the National Park Service, although rules for their protection are less strict than for national parks. Some are cared for by

the federal Bureau of Land Management, the Fish and Wildlife Service or the Forest Service. Each agency has policies for safeguardi­ng the land while also allowing some public use. For instance, policies can include limits on mining, timber cutting and recreation­al activities such as riding offroad vehicles.

A CONTENTIOU­S HISTORY

Many national monument proclamati­ons have enjoyed broad support. Others have been fiercely contested in Congress and the courts, including designatio­ns by Franklin D. Roosevelt (Jackson Hole National Monument, now Grand

Teton National Park); Jimmy Carter (vast lands in Alaska); and George W. Bush (Papahanaum­okuakea Marine National Monument northwest of Hawaii).

Trump’s choice of Jan. 1, 1996, as the starting date for his review was prompted by lingering resentment among Utah conservati­ves of Bill Clinton’s designatio­n of the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument that year.

Critics say presidents increasing­ly are protecting areas that are too large and do not fit the law’s original purpose of shielding particular historical or archaeolog­ical sites. Designatin­g millions of acres for scientific observatio­n or sheltering rare species, they contend,

is a “federal land grab” that ignores the wishes of local residents, although the lands already belonged to the government or were under federal control.

Zinke says the pendulum has swung too far toward protecting public lands and away from the “multiple-use” concept advanced by Gifford Pinchot, the first chief of the Forest Service and an early leader in the conservati­on movement.

Monument supporters say the designatio­ns are essential to protect sensitive areas from looting and damage.

Complaints about people getting kicked off the land are exaggerate­d, they say, and opposition fades as nearby communitie­s benefit

from tourism the monuments attract. A recent study by the nonprofit research group Headwaters Economics found that indicators such as employment, population and percapita income held steady or improved in sections of the West where monuments larger than 10,000 acres had been establishe­d since 1981.

LEGAL PRINCIPLES

Some monuments have been downsized over the years, either by presidenti­al order or by Congress, while others have been enlarged. No such actions have been contested in court. No president has tried to revoke a predecesso­r’s designatio­n of a monument. Zinke said he isn’t recommendi­ng that Trump do so, although Trump could overrule him.

The Antiquitie­s Act does not explicitly say whether a president can nullify a monument proclamati­on or reduce a monument’s area. A legal analysis commission­ed by the National Parks Conservati­on Associatio­n cites a 1938 opinion by then-Attorney General Homer Cummings, who wrote that a monument designatio­n has the force of law and can be reversed only by Congress. A House report accompanyi­ng the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 agreed, as do some environmen­tal attorneys.

But a study for the conservati­ve American Enterprise Institute released in March argues that when Congress authorizes the executive branch to write regulation­s, the power to repeal them generally can be assumed. That’s especially so, it says, when a president is correcting a predecesso­r’s act that exceeded what a law intended — such as creating vast monuments when the Antiquitie­s Act says they should consist of “the smallest area compatible with the proper care and management of the objects to be protected.”

WHAT’S NEXT?

Zinke’s report goes to Trump, who will make the final call about whether to change the status of any monuments. Environmen­tal groups and Native American tribes are expected to challenge any eliminatio­ns or reductions.

Congressio­nal Republican­s have at least five pending bills that would deny the president unilateral authority to designate future monuments, requiring approval of Congress or the governors and legislatur­es in affected states. Some would add further conditions.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Susie Gelbart walks near petroglyph­s at the Gold Butte National Monument near Bunkervill­e, Nev. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke said he’s recommendi­ng that none of 27 national monuments carved from wilderness and ocean and under review by the Trump...
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Susie Gelbart walks near petroglyph­s at the Gold Butte National Monument near Bunkervill­e, Nev. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke said he’s recommendi­ng that none of 27 national monuments carved from wilderness and ocean and under review by the Trump...

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