Outdoor retailing giant Patagonia on Wednesday joined a flurry of
lawsuits challenging President Donald Trump's decision to chop up two
large national monuments in Utah
could finally bring an answer to the much-debated question of whether
presidents have the legal authority to undo or change monuments created
by past presidents.
Until that question is answered months or years from now, the fate of
the contested lands in Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante national
monuments will remain unresolved.
Proclamations signed Monday by the president allow lands no longer
protected as a national monument to be opened up in 60 days to mining,
but conservation and tribal groups will likely try to keep that from
happening.
Mark Squillace, professor of natural resources law at the University of
Colorado-Boulder, said he doubts the federal government would permit
mining so quickly after Trump's announcement because it would be bad
politics, especially as the legal battle mushrooms.
California-based Patagonia filed its lawsuit on behalf of several other
organizations to block Trump's reductions to Bears Ears. The
California-based company said in the lawsuit that Trump's proclamation
shrinking the monument by 85 percent exceeds the president's authority
and strips much-needed protections from sacred tribal lands.
Patagonia also replaced its usual home page with a stark message, "The President Stole Your Land."
The post drew a strong rebuke from Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke who called it "nefarious, false and a lie."
Three lawsuits already had been filed involving Utah's monuments. And
more are expected — especially if Trump follows Zinke's recommendations
to shrink two other monuments — Gold Butte in Nevada and Cascade Siskiyou in Oregon.
Supporters of Trump's move welcomed the fight, saying it will answer
longstanding questions about presidential power involving the protection
of land.
"Hopefully, we can have some closure on what the president can and
cannot do," said Mike Noel, a Republican state representative in Utah
who was on stage with the president during his proclamation signing in
Salt Lake City.
Past presidents have trimmed national monuments and redrawn their boundaries 18 times, according to the National Park Service.
Legal experts disagree on whether the 1906 Antiquities Act — allowing
presidents to create a monument — also lets them reduce one.
The question has never been settled in court, but conservation and
paleontology groups and Native American tribes launching lawsuits are
preparing to argue that Trump doesn't have that authority and his move
jeopardizes a wealth of Native American artifacts, dinosaur fossils and
rugged spaces.
"Gee whiz, it sounds like there are going to be a lot of attorneys
making a whole lot of money," quipped Noel. "For every organization,
there's a lunch ticket for a group of attorneys to exist."
Noel plans to intervene himself, filing a court brief to show support for the president's actions.
Donald Kochan, a professor of natural resources, property and
administrative law at Chapman University in Orange, California, believes
Trump's action is likely legal and the separate lawsuits allow each
group to show supporters they're speaking up.
Squillace said the lawsuits will likely be merged into one case for each monument.
He thinks a court will try to focus on the overall question of whether
Trump has the authority to reduce the monuments — something Squillace
doesn't think the president has the legal authority to do.
While the legal battles play out, Utah Republican Rep. Rob Bishop,
chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee, has introduced a bill
that would prevent presidents from designating monuments larger than
85,000 acres and give states and local officials the power to veto a
monument larger than 10,000 acres.
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