Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Plan keeps most of monument for shooters

BLM would close 11 percent of Sonoran Desert

- By Joel T. Vernile

WASHINGTON — The Bureau of Land Management has recommende­d closing 53,300 acres of the Sonoran Desert National Monument to recreation­al shooting but keeping the remaining 443,000 open to shooters.

It is the latest twist in a yearslong legal and administra­tive fight that saw federal officials at one point trying to prohibit shooting over the entire monument, only to reverse course and propose shooting throughout the site. That decision was subsequent­ly halted by a federal court, which allowed shooting over much of the monument while ordering a bureau review.

The latest plan, posted Oct. 20 in the Federal Register, calls for making 11 percent of the monument’s land off-limits to shooting. Hunting is not affected by any of the proposals considered by the bureau and would be allowed anywhere in the monument with the proper permits.

Gun groups that were contacted declined comment on the latest proposal because they had not seen it.

But an official with the Sierra Club worried that increased shooting could harm plants and wildlife in the monument and questioned the need for more shooting spaces given the huge amounts of open land in the area.

Sandy Bahr, director of the Sierra Club’s Grand Canyon Chapter, said that in addition to recreation­al shooting presenting a public safety hazard, there has been “well documented” damage to the environmen­t, as people have used cactus and monument rocks for targets. Cultural sites and vegetation have been disrupted, she said.

Bahr said the original proposal was to ban shooting throughout the monument and that officials “made a strong case for it.” But after groups such as the National Rifle Associatio­n got involved, she said the bureau started backing off.

“It’s not an undue burden,” Bahr said of proposals to limit shooting in the monument. “We think it’s necessary to protect resources.”

The Sonoran Desert National Monument was created in 2001 by President Bill Clinton, who called it a “magnificen­t example of untrammele­d Sonoran desert lanscape.” His proclamati­on establishi­ng the monument said that, in addition to archeologi­cal and historic sites, it is the “most biological­ly diverse of North American deserts” and is home to endangered species as well as forests of iconic saguaro cacti.

Oct. 20 started a 30-day protest period for the public to voice concerns or support for the proposal, as well as a 60-day legal review by the governor, said Adam Eggers, a spokesman for the BLM Arizona.

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