Since 2007, I have been writing a blog at http://jamesmcgillis.com. In order to reach more readers, I have selected the best of my blog articles and published them here. I hope that you enjoy...
Saturday, November 6, 2021
BLM/SITLA - Subterfuge and Obfuscation Exposed in Parcel-32 Land Exchange - 2014
BLM/SITLA - Subterfuge and Obfuscation Exposed in Parcel-32 Land Exchange
Early in his first term, President Obama signed into law the Utah Recreational Land Exchange Act (URLEA)
of 2009. Its full title was, “To direct the exchange of certain land
in Grand, San Juan, and Uintah Counties, Utah, and for other purposes.”
At that time, few people realized that the phrase, “and for other
purposes” would subvert the publicly avowed intention of that bill.
See a U.S. Army Black Ops visit to Parcel 32, Moab, Utah
If you read the official Library of Congress Summary of the enabling
legislation, its wording is straightforward. It authorizes an exchange
of federal lands for state owned lands within certain Utah Counties: 8/5/2009 - Public Law [Summary].
As
the official summary states, the state and federal parcels exchanged
were to be of equal value. Oddly, there is no mention of “recreational
lands” in the official summary. Later, on an official web page, the
Bureau of Land Management (BLM) touted the supposed “conservation and recreation value” of the URLEA. On that web page, BLM stated the following: “The
BLM will acquire 58-parcels with high conservation and recreation
value, totaling 25,034 acres, primarily in Grand County. These parcels
will expand the BLM backcountry with world class recreation sites like
Corona Arch and Morning Glory Arch. This exchange will improve the
quantity and quality of recreational experiences for visitors to public
lands and waters managed by the BLM. The State will acquire 34-parcels
with high mineral development potential, totaling 35,516 acres,
primarily in Uintah County. The state expects development of these high
potential parcels to boost public school funding across Utah”.
On that BLM/URLEA web page, conversion of Exchange Parcel 32
to “light industrial use in future” received no mention. As URLEA
became law in May 2014, the fate of those 352-acres was in direct
contradiction to BLM’s “story line” about saving arches and promoting
recreation within Grand County. Instead, prime open land in Grand
County transferred to the State of Utah via its School and
Institutional Lands Trust Administration (SITLA). At just over $2000 per acre, SITLA received industrial land at cow pasture prices.
In its “Protest Dismissed” document, BLM dismissed my protest of Parcel 32 valuation as “grazing land”. To quote that document, it stated, “The
EA disclosed the current and future anticipated use of Federal Lands
by SITLA. The uses identified for (Parcel 32) include: Current/grazing
and wildlife habitat; Future/continued grazing use for intermediate
term; possible light industrial use in future.” Without citing any corroborating appraisal documents, BLM stated that their process took "future potential development into account". If BLM appraised the industrial future of Parcel 32 against any comparable
parcels in Grand County, where are those parcels located? According to
my recent searches, there are no undeveloped industrial parcels for
sale in Grand County, let alone a 352-acre parcel intertwined with its
regional airport.
In its “Protest Dismissed” document, BLM writes that, “Environmental Assessment No. DOI-BLM-UT-9100-2013-001-EA (EA), completed in March 2013(emphasis mine)
in support of the exchange action, disclosed mineral leasing and
development as the projected (sic) on many of the parcels the SITLA
would acquire. The “EA”, made available for public review and comment
via BLM’s Electronic Bulletin Board (EBB) in April 2013, addressed the
potential impacts to resources associated with mineral development, and
did not disclose any significant impacts associated with the proposed
exchange.”
On Page 8 of BLM’s "Decision Record Signed", in "Section B. Land Use Conformance", it specifically states that "parcel 32 (Moab) located in the Labyrinth Rims/Gemini Bridges SRMA" was "identified for retention In Federal ownership in (its) respective RMP".
Later in the same paragraph, BLM employs obfuscatory 'double-speak',
saying that Parcel 32 and two other parcels were included in the
exchange because, "BLM
determined that a planning amendment was unnecessary as the URLEA
explicitly directs the BLM to exchange certain Federal lands, provided
the exchange meets certain conditions".
In that sentence we learn that BLM was required to meet certain
explicit conditions for a unilateral conversion of Parcel 32 from its
current protected status as federal grazing land and antelope habitat
to future light industrial use. Nowhere else in the Decision Record
Signed, the Environmental Assessment or the Exchange Agreement do we
learn why "URLEA explicitly directs the BLM" to include Parcel 32 in the exchange or which of "certain conditions" were met. Whenever BLM uses the word "certain" twice in one sentence, we should be told what those certainties are.
The BLM EBB web page referenced in BLM’s “Protest Dismissed”
document contains several conflicting data points. Referencing BLM’s
reasons for denying my protest one at a time, here are the facts:
1. Contrary to BLM’s dismissal, the “EA” was not “completed in March 2013”. In fact, the “public review/commentary period” did not start until 4/22/13. In fact, the EBB web page states; “4/01/2013: Environmental Assessment Being Prepared [BLM]”. Elsewhere on the same page, it states; “12/30/2013: EA Completed [BLM]”.
2. Farther on in its dismissal, BLM claims that the “EA”, as posted on the BLM EBB in April 2013; “addressed the potential impacts to resources associated with mineral(emphasis mine) development”. Concluding, the "EA" “did not disclose any significant impacts associated with the proposed exchange”.
3. The BLM document titled "Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI)" was unavailable to the public in April 2013 and was not published until February 2014. In its “Protest Dismissed”
document, BLM indicates that full disclosure of all relevant documents
to my protest were completed and published not later than April 2013.
Clearly, with the February 2014 publication of the FONSI, such is not
the case.
4. As referenced on the BLM EBB web page, the much vaunted “EA” was not completed until; “12/30/2013: EA Completed [BLM]”. Nine months prior to the publication of the “EA”, did BLM already know that it would “not disclose any significant impacts associated with the proposed exchange”?
If the reader click’s the link to the final “EA” document at the
bottom of the BLM EBB web page, the resulting Environmental Assessment
is dated September 2013.
5.
The crux of the issue is; when, where and in what form was the
Environmental Assessment released to the public? Was it in April 2013,
as BLM suggests in its “Protest Dismissed” document”? Was it in
September 2013, as the published “final EA document” indicates? Or was
it completed on December 30, 2013, as the Electronic Bulletin Board
page indicates? Any way you look at it, the content and publication
date(s) of the Environmental Assessment represent a moving target.
In the conclusion of its “Protest Dismissed” document, BLM states, “A
protestor bears the burden of establishing that the BLM premised a
decision on a clear error of law, error of material fact, or failure to
consider a substantial environmental question of material
significance. The protestor has not met this burden in this instance”.
Although I cannot claim that BLM has committed a “clear error of law”, its inaccuracy and the conflicting publication dates associated with the “EA” represent a multifarious “error of material fact”.
Other factual errors include limiting the scope of BLM’s environmental assessment to “the potential impacts to resources associated with mineral development”.
In so doing, I believe that BLM discounted the future industrialization
value of Parcel 32. Nowhere else in Grand County is there a major
parcel self-certified for future industrial use. If unilaterally
converting 352-acres of open land to “future light industrial use” at Canyonlands Field does not qualify as having potential environmental impact, what does?
Do not forget the bargain price of just over $2000 per acre that SITLA
exchanged for unique and now pre-sanctioned industrial land. As of this
writing, the Grand County Council plans to use the final URLEA
“Exchange Agreement” as the basis for future resource and land use
planning. As such, BLM’s designation of “future light industrial use” on Parcel 32 may well create its own self-fulfilling prophecy.
By
law, the URLEA was to be an “exchange of equal value”. Only time will
tell what profit SITLA will make from the sale of Parcel 32. My guess
is that it will be many multiples of the $780,000 value that they
exchanged. As SITLA plans for the sale of Parcel 32 into the private
sector, I hope that it will be more transparent with its procedures
than BLM was during the URLEA process.
As for the Grand County Council, its current makeup is stacked in favor
of every possible form of mineral and industrial development. In May
2014, when the Exchange Agreement became federal law, the Grand County
Council found its perfect foil. In July 2014, the council refused to disavow a planned “Hydrocarbon Highway”
through the ancient and sacred sites at Sego Canyon. In its quest to
pave Sego Canyon and to rezone Parcel 32 from “grazing” to “light
industrial”, the Grand County Council now cites “federal law” as its
legal precedent.
When
SITLA does sell Parcel 32, I expect a bidding war between energy
companies and Grand County developers. In the over hyped legal
agreement that BLM and SITLA called a “Recreational Land Exchange”, the phrase “and for other purposes” in that law will soon create a New Industrial Desert
on Parcel 32 at Canyonlands Field near Moab, Utah. As the old saying
goes, you cannot judge a book by its cover. In the case of the Utah
Recreational and Exchange Act of 2009 (URLEA),
the exchange of Parcel 32 was in direct contradiction to the name and
spirit, if not the letter of that law. If BLM and SITLA wish to
maintain any claim to being stewards of the land, both must disavow
such subterfuge in the future.
No comments:
Post a Comment