Utah's SITLA/BLM Land Swap Does Not Benefit the People or the Land
This section Courtesy KCPW News, July 09, 2009
"U.S. House Unanimously Approves SITLA Land Swap", by Elizabeth Ziegler 
(KCPW News)  The U.S. House 
of Representatives unanimously approved a land swap with the Utah School
 and Institutional Trust Lands Administration (SITLA)
 yesterday.  If approved by the Senate, it will authorize a patchwork 
assortment of more than 40,000 acres of SITLA lands to be transferred to
 the Bureau of Land Management (BLM)
 in exchange for a similar amount of land in the oil and gas-rich Uintah
 Basin.  However, Congressman Jim Matheson, who sponsored the 
legislation, says it does more than that.  
SITLA believes oil and gas 
development on the Uintah Basin land could add tens of millions of 
dollars to the school trust fund.  A portion of the interest from the 
fund is distributed to Utah schools each year.
Matheson says this is the 
first time that recreational value was taken into consideration for such
 a federal land swap.  The value of public land has traditionally been 
based on the value of potential development or resource extraction.  He 
believes the bill will set a precedent for future legislation.  Liz 
Thomas with the  	Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance in Moab hopes it will.
"We do hope it can serve as a
 model because this land exchange bill, honestly, it's been years in the
 making and it was in the end supported by pretty much all sides," 
Thomas says.  "And that's pretty unheard of."
Thomas says the land swap would represent a significant step toward protecting many scenic areas around Moab, including one of the largest red rock formations in the region, Corona Arch. - (End of KCPW Story)
July 2009 Author's Note: On a 
higher level, it is sad to see that we shall concentrate our destructive
 and extractive forces in one area.  If we were Uintah Basin Native 
Americans, we might think that this is not such a good idea.
 
 	Look south to  	Black Mesa, Arizona, near  	Navajo National Monument and you will find the best-hidden strip mine in the West.  Utilizing the  	Black Mesa and Lake Powell (Electric) Railroad, the aptly named Black Mesa provides relatively  	 	dirty western coal to the Navajo Generating Station, which overlooks Lake Powell and the Glen Canyon Dam.  
Today, there is a growing consensus that the dam itself was an 
unnecessary environmental tragedy.  During the increasingly hot summers,
 the  	 	oversubscribed Colorado River
 cannot supply enough water to spin a sufficient number of turbines at 
Glen Canyon Dam to meet peak electric power demand.  At such times, 
additional coal-smoke haze issues forth from the tall stacks of the 
Navajo Generating Station.  These smoke signals send a message of 
environmental degradation to each of the Four Corners states.  Fickle 
winds roundabout the canyons of the Colorado Plateau may contribute to 
such far-flung phenomena as Uintah Basin’s summer haze
Ask the current residents of Giza, Egypt
 if they would support a new round of pyramid building in their 
once-lush valley.  In ancient times, over-development there initiated 
what we now call the Sahara Desert.  Yes, current dwellers of the desert
 southwest, it can happen here.  	
 
 
(Some) Environmentalists like the swap, 
and worked for its  	passage in Congress, because it protects 
“remarkable places along the  	Colorado River,” said Bill Hedden, 
executive director of the 	 	Grand Canyon Trust.
“The schoolkids come out ahead and the natural places come out ahead,” Hedden said. “It’s a great exchange.” 
  
  	January 2012 Author's Note: 
According to The Salt Lake  	Tribune newspaper, "Utah is weary of 
waiting for federal funds to complete a  	heralded swap of recreational 
lands near Moab in exchange for energy swaths  	in the Uintah Basin, so 
state school trust officials plan to start paying  	appraisers 
themselves to seal the deal."
“The schoolkids come out ahead and the natural places come out ahead,” Hedden said. “It’s a great exchange.”
I wonder if the Native American 
school kids living among  	natural gas wells and breathing polluted air 
in the Uintah Basin will be as  	sanguine. 
 By James McGillis at 11:44 PM | Environment | Comments (0) | Link

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