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A blind man could see this coming.
It is highly unlikely. The full specifics are not out until Trump visits Utah and announces them in December. This will be met in court undoubtably. Many reports specifically do say coal mining is the main reason for opening up Grand Staircase, and I’m sorry, but I go there every year and hunt and shed hunt and the thought of it just disgusts me a little. It’s one of the most unique and great mule deer herds and habitat in the country, the thought of oil and gas pads dotting the landscape and coal trucks and roads cutting through the area just kind of hurts to think about.
What reports mention coal mining as the main reason?
Some long time locals/visitors to the GSENM area I know in Utah experienced a similar "hurt" by the monument designation, which brought a lot more people and a change in roads to the area...It is highly unlikely. The full specifics are not out until Trump visits Utah and announces them in December. This will be met in court undoubtably. Many reports specifically do say coal mining is the main reason for opening up Grand Staircase, and I’m sorry, but I go there every year and hunt and shed hunt and the thought of it just disgusts me a little. It’s one of the most unique and great mule deer herds and habitat in the country, the thought of oil and gas pads dotting the landscape and coal trucks and roads cutting through the area just kind of hurts to think about.
Some long time locals/visitors to the GSENM area I know in Utah experienced a similar "hurt" by the monument designation, which brought a lot more people and a change in roads to the area...
Glad you took that in the vein I meant it. I'm not arguing for mineral extraction, but just wanted to pointed out that monument designation did not "save" everything, at least for those folks.
Those upset with it are the ones sitting in the corner pouting and still complaining.
Oh you mean like myself? I want opportunity as well, the opportunity for future generations to have a landscape in tact in some places and reserves of minerals that are left alone because the damage extracting them in some areas for short term gain are outweighed by the long term consequences that has. I understand the initial shock and frustration, I don’t understand the unwillingness to embrace something that can actually help the area. When you full out resist and are bitter for 2 decades and sitting in the corner pouting it does you no good. There are great people in these areas that would rather be bitter than better their future and situation, including the county commissioners. What’s best for the greatest amount of people over the greatest amount of time is what I support, and leaving it be is just that. Drilling and mining it is the short term, short sighted, get rich quick scheme that has irreversible consequences. I’m not discounting the people who disagree with the monument, I just don’t think they’ve done enough to move on from the bitterness.I find it amusing the disrespectful discounting of people who've been tied to public lands in rural Utah for generations. People want opportunity for their kids and monument designations change and limit those opportunities.
Too bad there’s not some compromise where like Montanans could keep there 100k/yr mining jobs for certain, keep mining in Roundup
http://billingsgazette.com/news/sta...&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=LEEDCC+
and we leave National Monuments alone.
Of course both sides are extremists and neither would ‘win’ under those circumstances.
We should mine coal NOWHERE or we stripmine Old Faithful. There’s no in between.
While I know this to be true for some folks in that part of UT, that is not an apt description of the folks I know. The accomplishments of their careers state otherwise...Those upset with it are the ones sitting in the corner pouting and still complaining.