BUNKERVILLE, Nev. (AP) — In a story Jan. 2 about a protest of the designation of a national monument in southern Nevada, The Associated Press reported erroneously that the U.S. Interior Department said grazing will be allowed in the Gold Butte area. Livestock grazing has been banned in the area since 1998, under a Clark County plan designed to conserve habitat for the Mojave Desert tortoise.

A corrected version of the story is below:

Bundy friends, family protest federal monument decision

Supporters of cattleman and anti-federal figure Cliven Bundy are protesting a presidential decision to give national monument protection to public land where Bundy grazes cows near his southern Nevada ranch

BUNKERVILLE, Nev. (AP) — Supporters of cattleman and anti-federal government figure Cliven Bundy are protesting a presidential decision to give national monument protection to public land where Bundy grazes cows near his southern Nevada ranch.

With Bundy and four sons in federal custody awaiting trial on conspiracy and other charges, a small group of other family members and friends staged a peaceful weekend rally Saturday near the Bundy home and the Gold Butte area outside Bunkerville, a small town near Arizona.

"We, the Bundy family, would like to say to President Obama that we are saddened, but not surprised, by the decision to make our ranch and home a national monument," the family said in a statement issued last week.

Family matriarch Carol Bundy did not immediately respond Monday to messages.

"The problems we have had with federal land management have never been about cows, tortoises, or fees," the statement said. "It has always been about the constitutional limits on the federal government's authority."

The Spectrum of St. George, Utah, (http://bit.ly/2iVR3K7) reported that Carol Bundy expressed fear during the protest that the government will ban grazing in the Gold Butte area. Livestock grazing has been banned in the area since 1998, under a Clark County plan aimed at conserving habitat for the Mojave Desert tortoise. The tortoise is considered threatened under the federal Endangered Species Act.

Story continues

Bundy nephew Josey Spencer said the group was hopeful that President-elect Donald Trump will reverse Obama's monument declaration after Trump takes office.

Trial is set to begin Feb. 6 in U.S. District Court in Las Vegas for the first six defendants in the criminal case stemming from the armed standoff in April 2014 that stopped a U.S. Bureau of Land Management roundup of Bundy cattle. Nineteen people were arrested last year, including five Bundy family members. Two men have pleaded guilty. Cliven Bundy and four sons are due to stand trial later this year.

President Barack Obama last Thursday declared the nearly 470-square-mile Gold Butte National Monument in an area across the Virgin River from the Bundy homestead, some 80 miles northeast of Las Vegas

The announcement came in conjunction with designation of a more than 2,100-square-mile Bears Ears National Monument in Utah.

The local Moapa Band of Paiute Indians praised the move, along with conservationists and advocates. They say the area is home to threatened wildlife such as the desert tortoise and bighorn sheep, and contains ancient rock art and artifacts, unique geologic features and natural landscapes, rare fossils and recently discovered dinosaur tracks.

U.S. Sen. Harry Reid, a Democrat who is retiring after 34 years in Congress, was a key backer of the Gold Butte monument designation.

Bundy family members maintain the state, not the federal government, has authority over the public land where he has grazed cattle for decades. The position has roots in a nearly half-century fight over grazing policies in Nevada and the West, where the U.S. government controls vast expanses of property.

Federal land managers obtained court orders to remove Bundy cattle from the land after telling judges that he failed for years to pay required grazing fees.