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Interior secretary steps into Utah public lands tug-of-war | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan s News Source

Sophia Eppolito Utah Gov. Spencer Cox takes a selfie with Rep. Blake Moore, U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson and Sen. Mitt Romney during a tour by ancient dwellings along the Butler Wash trail at the Bears Ears National Monument Thursday, April 8, 2021, near Blanding, Utah. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, Pool) April 08, 2021 - 4:51 PM SALT LAKE CITY - For decades, a public lands tug-of-war has played out over a vast expanse of southern Utah where red rocks reveal petroglyphs and cliff dwellings and distinctive twin buttes bulge from a grassy valley. A string of U.S. officials has heard from those who advocate for broadening national monuments to protect the area s many archaeological and cultural sites, considered sacred to surrounding tribes, and those who fiercely oppose what they see as federal overreach.

Navajo Nation urges full Bears Ears restoration in meeting with Haaland

Deseret News Share this story The Bears Ears of the Bears Ears National Monument are pictured from the air on Monday, May 8, 2017. Navajo Nation leaders called for full restoration and expansion of the Bears Ears National Monument to 1.9 million acres in a meeting with U.S. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland on Wednesday in Bluff, Utah. Scott G Winterton, Deseret News Navajo Nation leaders called for full restoration and expansion of the Bears Ears National Monument to 1.9 million acres in a meeting with U.S. Secretary of Interior Deb Haaland on Wednesday in Bluff, San Juan County. The move would reverse former President Donald Trump’s sweeping reduction of the national monument designated under former President Barack Obama.

AZ Republicans Rage At Corporate Pushback Against Proposed Voting Restrictions

April 7, 2021 1:50 p.m. J.D. Mesnard, a Republican state senator in Arizona, couldn’t hide his disappointment that a high-powered group of Phoenix business leaders had signed onto a letter calling a bill of his one that significantly beefs up identification requirements for voting by mail an attempt at “voter suppression cloaked as reform.”  “That exact phrasing that was used is beyond disappointing,” a wounded Mesnard told TPM over the phone Tuesday.  “I know those guys, at least some of them, that signed the letter,” the senator said. “I’ve got a reasonably good relationship with them. Don’t always agree on every issue. But that specific phraseology how that’s characterized, my intent being questioned is beyond offensive.” 

What a Biden Presidency Means for the National Parks

With huge bipartisan and public support, and an ability to make personal the importance of conservation (over 300 million people visited the parks in 2019), the National Park Service could see itself as a figurehead for larger efforts like 30 by 30, though the path to get there may be rocky

Week in Review, Dec 30

the story at JHNewsAndGuide.com. Virus kills Former GTNP boss A onetime Grand Teton National Park superintendent who rose to the top of the National Park Service has died after contracting COVID-19. Gary Everhardt, 86, led Teton Park from 1972 to 1975, departing to become the ninth director of the National Park Service under presidents Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter. Both Gary and his wife, Nancy, succumbed to complications from the novel coronavirus during the past week in the Charlotte, North Carolina, area, according to longtime friend and fellow Park Service retiree Phil Francis. “They both had COVID, and it was contracted through an assisted care facility,” Francis said Monday. “She died Wednesday night, and Gary died last night.”

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