FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Moab, UT — On New Year's Eve, the Utah office of the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) announced a 5-year, $75 million dollar financial agreement to support the continued destruction of pinyon pine, juniper, and sagebrush ecosystems throughout Utah.
The BLM committed up to $75 million dollars to the Utah Watershed Restoration Initiative (UWRI), a partnership of federal and state agencies and public-land grazing and hunting interests. UWRI has clearcut and mechanically “treated” hundreds of thousands of acres of public lands in Utah in the name of restoration since its inception 12 years ago.
Chaining pinyon pine and juniper forests
Recent scientific literature clearly outlines the risks associated with large-scale surface-disturbing activities, such as chaining or mulching live pinyon pine and juniper forests, yet the BLM and UWRI have almost always ignored this information and instead forged ahead with an antiquated, unscientific approach to land management that more often than not converts the “treated” areas into exotic forage and invasive species.
The site of a "chaining" treatment in Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. TIM PETERSON
"The BLM's commitment to fund the Utah Watershed Restoration Initiative over the next five years represents the worst of the Trump administration's war on science and refusal to acknowledge the global climate crisis we're witnessing on a daily basis," said Kya Marienfeld, wildlands attorney with the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance. “Rather than destroying large native ecosystems, the BLM should be working to preserve the ecological integrity of intact landscapes in order to mitigate the ongoing climate crisis. ”
"Utah’s public lands are forever scarred by 60 years of counterproductive vegetation removal projects, which have historically done little more than increase non-native forage for cattle," said Laura Welp, ecosystems specialist with Western Watersheds Project. "These destructive projects are based on fundamentally flawed concepts and failure should be expected. Continuing down the current path of promoting large-scale pinyon pine, juniper, and sagebrush clearcuts that are driven by funding rather than science spells disaster for Utah's remarkable public lands."
Turning public lands into feedlots
“While a rare BLM project funded by UWRI is actually committed to diverse public input and species other than livestock and big game, most are hell-bent on clearing out pinyon pine, juniper, and sagebrush to make room for livestock forage, and then UWRI and land managers never look back when the land has been reduced to cheatgrass, tumbleweed, bare soil, and/or a feedlot of non-native forage grasses,” said Mary O’Brien, Utah Forests director with the Grand Canyon Trust.
“Not only does the agreement represent a gross misuse of taxpayer funding, it also supports a partnership that has continually ignored best available scientific information regarding the risk of large-scale surface disturbing activities and the need to bolster climate resiliency by maintaining native ecosystems in a hotter, drier desert Southwest,” added Marienfeld.
Background
Read more about legal efforts to protect pinyon and juniper forests inside Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument here.
Read the BLM press announcement here.