‘I’m
Shocked, Shocked To Discover Land Use Going On Here’
by
Vin Suprynowicz
by Vin Suprynowicz
DIGG THIS
Once youve
passed through the entrance gate to one of Americas magnificent
national parks or monuments, what do you see?
Nothin.
In most cases,
mile upon mile of nothin.
The sweeping
grandeur of the Grand Canyon is not visible from any common entrance
point to the national park of that name. Expect to drive several
miles before you see the first signs directing you to various hotels
and overlooks. (Entering from the north, LOTS of miles.)
Floridas
Everglades area the same way. Yes, the historic wetlands have been
shrunken by unwise water projects further north, but many a child
has gazed out upon the sweep of mostly dry grasslands after passing
the now entering sign, asking, Wheres the
swamp? Wheres the gators?
The traveler
does not come upon these scenic wonders immediately, because those
who planned these vast impoundments understood the concept of a
buffer zone. With few exceptions, the scenic vistas
are surrounded by five to 10 miles or more of empty
space. This was done so that those enjoying the scenery would not
have to gaze upon carnivals and trailer parks and used car graveyards
teetering at the edge of Bryce Canyon or Yosemite Falls.
Outside the
parks and monuments, the federal government may control even vaster
acreage. But those lands are turned over to the U.S. Bureau of land
Management, which has a different mission, seeing that those less
sensitive lands are used in ways that benefit the nation.
Yet listen
now to the green extremists, complaining that mining or tree-cutting
or grazing is allowed, only one valley away or once
ridge line away from a national park or monument.
On Nov. 4,
the BLM announced that on Dec. 19 they will auction off the rights
to drill for oil or gas on more than 50,000 acres of BLM land close
to or adjoining three national parks in Utah: Arches, Dinosaur,
and Canyonlands.
This
is a fire sale, shrills Stephen Bloch, staff attorney for
the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, the Bush administrations
last great gift to the oil and gas industry.
We find
it shocking and disturbing, says Cordell Troy, chief National
Park Service administrator in Utah. Thats 40 tracts
within four miles of these parks.
Read it again.
Four miles outside the parks existing buffer zones.
Franklin Seal,
spokesman for the environmental group Wildland CPR, contends If
youre standing at Delicate Arch, like thousands of people
do every year, and youre looking through the arch, you could
see drill pads on the hillside behind it. Thats how ridiculous
this proposed lease sale is.
See people
earning an honest wage, working to heat our homes and fill our gas
tanks
by using binoculars, perhaps?
In an era when
economically struggling Americans actually celebrate when gasoline
prices fall below three dollars a gallon when this nation
needs to develop all its domestic resources to reduce its dependence
on foreign oil theres nothing silly about
creating wealth and real jobs by allowing entrepreneurs to risk
their own capital developing our own resources.
If
the borders of the Arches National Park were not properly drawn
to create an adequate buffer, its odd no one noticed this
before. In such specific cases, the BLM might certainly compromise
on a parcel or two.
But these protests
are like complaining someone almost broke the 65 mph
speed limit by driving 63 mph, or that they almost violated
the drinking age by serving beer to a 23-year-old.
Im
puzzled the park Service has been as upset as they are, Selma
Sierra, BLM director for the state of Utah, tells The Associated
Press. There are already many parcels leased around the parks.
Details, details.
What does that matter, when theres serious posturing to be
done?
Soon well
be hearing about unsightly land uses within a hundred miles
of a national park! Since many national parks sit in closer
proximity to each other than that, here in the West, such an exclusionary
zone would bar millions of acres of deserts scrub from any
productive use.
Which, one
begins to suspect, is precisely what the green extreme has in mind.
November
28, 2008
Vin
Suprynowicz [send
him mail] is assistant editorial page editor of the daily Las
Vegas Review-Journal and author of The
Black Arrow.
Copyright
© 2008 Vin Suprynowicz
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