FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Petition asks administrative appeals board to "stay" BLM decision to designate Indian Creek ATV trail
MOAB – Last Friday, a coalition of conservation groups (Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, the Grand Canyon Trust, the Utah Chapter of the Sierra Club, and Great Old Broads for Wilderness) appealed a controversial decision by the BLM’s Monticello field office to approve new ATV trails and parking areas in the heart of the popular Indian Creek region and within the newly designated Bears Ears National Monument. The decision, which came only days before President Obama’s monument proclamation, was made without any opportunity for public review or comment.
“It is outrageous that the BLM would make this decision without seeking public input,” said Kya Marienfeld, Moab resident and Wildlands Field Advocate for the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance. “This area, like the rest of the new Bears Ears National Monument, is full of irreplaceable cultural resources and is an internationally treasured rock-climbing destination as well as the gateway into the Needles District of Canyonlands National Park. This highly controversial decision would extend significant ATV use into a part of the region that currently does not see that kind of off-road vehicle traffic.”
“Our local members have visited the site of the proposed project, and we can only oppose the creation of this unnecessary and undesirable ATV trail,” said Wayne Hoskisson from the Sierra Club Utah Chapter. “Lavender and Davis canyons will see a huge increase in noisy, motorized recreation. Even Canyonlands National Park criticized the route for this reason. The BLM wasted 10 years trying to justify this route. They should stop now, especially since it impacts the Bears Ears National Monument.”
Under consideration for years, the BLM previously approved construction of the Indian Creek ATV project in February 2015. At that time, the same coalition of conservation groups challenged the BLM’s decision and won a stay from the Interior Board of Land Appeals, which later vacated and remanded the decision back to the BLM (at its request) for additional analysis. Despite this order from the Board, the BLM’s newest decision on the ATV project repeats the same mistakes as its initial approval. The new trails and associated parking areas authorized by the BLM this time around will bisect an area that the BLM has already determined is a wilderness-caliber landscape, and will result in the disqualification of over 900 acres from potential future designation under the 1964 Wilderness Act.
In addition, the BLM’s designation of new ATV trails in Indian Creek directly contradicts the new Bears Ears National Monument proclamation, which calls for a full planning process before designating new roads or trails. Under the proclamation, new routes like the Indian Creek ATV trails and parking areas may be designated only for purposes of public safety or for protecting the fragile resources the monument safeguards.
“Why would the BLM rush to expand off-road vehicle use in Indian Creek just days before Bears Ears National Monument was designated?” asked Tim Peterson, Utah Wildlands Director for the Grand Canyon Trust. “Indian Creek is a treasure—the 80-year effort to protect it was successful because of its cultural importance. Now is the time to plan for the future considering all the values for which Bears Ears National Monument was protected—not to sneak in more off-roading just under the wire.”
Photographs of the Indian Creek area and links to maps and the BLM’s Environmental Assessment can be found here.