Interior secretary Ryan Zinke says his recommendations include boundary adjustments for some locations among 27 national monuments

This article is more than 3 years old

This article is more than 3 years old

Conservation safeguards on a “handful” of national monuments across the US could be rolled back following the delivery on Thursday of the White House’s long-awaited review of such public lands, interior secretary Ryan Zinke said.

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Speaking to the Associated Press in Billings, Montana, Zinke said unspecified boundary adjustments for some of the 27 national monuments were among his recommendations. None of the sites would be eliminated and revert to state or private ownership, he said, while public access for uses such as hunting, fishing or grazing would be maintained or expanded.



“I’ve heard this narrative that somehow the land is going to be sold or transferred,” Zinke said. “That narrative is patently false and shameful. The land was public before and it will be public after.”

While the details of Zinke’s recommendation to the president were not released to the public, the Washington Post, citing multiple individuals briefed on the decision, said the secretary had called for the downsizing of three monuments: the Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante monuments in Utah, and the Cascade-Siskiyou monument in Oregon. No further details were given.

There is considerable legal doubt over the executive’s power to eliminate national monument status. Conservation groups fear the review will rather open portions of such lands to exploitative use.

Dan Hartinger, deputy director of parks and public lands defense at the Wilderness Society, called Zinke’s announcement a loss for the American people and said: “This effort to erase protections for current national monuments is not only horribly misguided and places at risk cultural, historical and natural resources, but it is also illegal.

“This is not something they have the authority to do.”

Zinke declined to say whether portions of the monuments would be opened up to oil and gas drilling, mining, logging and other industries for which Trump has advocated.



“There’s an expectation we need to look out 100 years from now to keep the public land experience alive in this country,” Zinke said. “You can protect the monument by keeping public access to traditional uses.”

He also spoke of protecting tribal interests and historical land grants, pointing to monuments in New Mexico, where ranchers have opposed two monuments proclaimed by Barack Obama.

The news nonetheless represented a blow for conservationists and a win for conservative groups, Republican politicians and extractive industries across the US west, which have led a concerted campaign against the Antiquities Act of 1906. The 111-year-old law allows the executive branch to unilaterally protect public lands by declaring them national monuments, a power some see as an obstacle to industrial development and commercial enterprise.

Utah’s congressional delegation played a key role in bringing the fight against national monuments to the attention of the White House. In an April press conference announcing Zinke’s review, Trump credited that state’s senior senator, Orrin Hatch, with making him aware of the issue.

“He would call me and call me and say, ‘You got to do this,’” Trump said.

Utah was the first stop on a tour of national monuments that Zinke conducted this year. He went there to visit Bears Ears national monument, 1.3m-acre expanse of canyons, mesas and Native American artifacts that was designated by Barack Obama towards the end of his second term.

Supported by a coalition of tribal groups and conservationists and opposed by local politicians and industrial interests, the Bears Ears monument has been controversial from the start. In June, Zinke publicly recommended that Trump should shrink Bears Ears to the “smallest area compatible” with its conservation.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke rides a horse in the Bears Ears National Monument near Blanding, Utah. Photograph: Scott G Winterton/AP

The review is seen by critics as the latest chapter in the White House’s unstinting drive to weaken the legacies of Trump’s Democratic predecessors.

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On Tuesday, Democrats on the House natural resources committee released a report criticizing the monument review as a scheme to promote “development by private companies of fossil fuel resources currently off-limits due to monument designations”.

If Trump decides to follow Zinke’s advice, lawsuits would surely ensue.

“I am sure it will be challenged in court, and I think it would be vulnerable to a legal challenge,” said Robert Keiter, a law professor at the University of Utah.

“There is no direct legal precedent on rescission or modification of national monuments. The Antiquities Act itself is silent on that point, but practice suggests that this is not something that presidents have assumed they have the authority to do in the past.”