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Federal land grab called 'political' Clinton's Utah deal not justified by environmental claims, says report Posted: October 01, 1998 1:00 am Eastern By Sarah Foster
While the U.S. House of Representatives has already approved President Clinton's designation of 1.7 million acres of Utah land as a federal wilderness area, the House Resources Committee has yet to read a blistering report by its own staff characterizing the deal initiated by the president just seven weeks before the 1996 election, as a blatant political act under the guise of environmental protection. "The only thing the president was trying to protect by designating the Utah Monument was his chance to win re-election," the report bluntly states. "The 'threat' motivating the president's action was electoral, not environmental." WorldNetDaily has obtained a copy of the document that outlines the administration's record of deception in the formation of Utah's Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. Scheduled for release last week, the report is being withheld from distribution and public release in part to ensure passage of Utah-related legislation. In the Senate, there's the "Utah Schools and Lands Exchange Act of 1998," a bill which would give Utah 139,000 acres of federally held land, certain mineral rights, and $50 million in exchange for all of Utah's claims to lands within national parks, monuments, forests and federal areas. Authored by Utah Republican James Hansen, it was approved by the House in June. Still in the House is the pork-laden Omnibus Wilderness Bill, also by Hansen, which includes the identical legislation -- just in case it doesn't get through the Senate on its own. Hansen, who chairs the Subcommittee on National Parks and Public Lands, has admitted he agreed to the deal, which was suggested by the administration, and persuaded Resources Committee Chairman Don Young, R-AK, to pull the report from its scheduled release. "The report ... outlines many serious violations regarding the creation of the monument, but I am happy to forego committee consideration as long as we are making progress on other issues which are critical to the people of Utah," Hansen said in a written statement. Aptly titled "Monumental Abuse," the report concludes there was no threat to the environment, it was "illusory." And the president's statement -- wherein he described the area as a "national treasure" -- "was as far away from accuracy as he was from Utah." The House Resources Committee has been investigating what went on behind the scenes in the establishment of the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument and why it was done in the first place. "Monumental Abuse" contradicts the official version at every point. The White House claims designation was necessary to protect a fragile and important ecosystem in southwest Utah from mining and development. In particular, the president wanted to include the 1,650-square-mile Kaiparowits Plateau within the monument to save it from an impending mining operation. The Kaiparowits Plateau contains the largest undeveloped coal field in the country and was to be developed by Andalex Resources, Inc., which held the leases on 34,000 acres. Most of the paperwork had been completed and the project was on track. Andalex planned on mining 100 to 120 million tons of coal over a 45-year period. This would have meant hundreds of jobs, new businesses, and millions of dollars in taxes and royalty revenues for cash-strapped local governments. That didn't matter to Clinton, who was angling for environmentalist votes. "Mining jobs are good jobs, and mining is important to our national security -- but we can't have mines everywhere, and we shouldn't have mines that threaten national treasures," the president intoned to his audience at the Grand Canyon photo-op. There, in an adjacent state (he didn't dare go to Utah), he signed the proclamation creating the monument. Clinton didn't mention that the coal he was effectively locking away was a low-sulfur, clean-burning coal called "compliance coal," so-named because it meets requirements set by the EPA. It is in demand worldwide as a fuel for electric plants. Nor did he mention that one of the only other places in the world where comparable coal is found is Indonesia, the home of Mochtar and James Riady, the Chinese government-connected billionaires who poured millions of dollars into Clinton campaigns in 1992 and 1996. The report builds on one released last November by the staff of the Resources Committee. The earlier report revealed that the administration, notably the President's Council on Environmental Quality, knew that the monument area wasn't "threatened" or even particularly significant. The Kaiparowits Plateau wasn't part of the monument considerations until months into the process. The CEQ had been looking at other areas for Clinton to designate, like areas near Arches and Canyonland National Parks and Lake Powell. In a March 25, 1996, e-mail Katie McGinty, who chairs the President's Council on Environmental Quality, expressed certain qualms she was having. "i'm [sic] increasingly of the view that we should just drop these utah [sic] ideas. we [sic] do not really know how the enviros will react and I do think there is a danger of 'abuse' of the withdraw/antiquities authorities especially because these lands are not really endangered," she wrote. A few days before, on March 22, CEQ staffer Linda Lance had written an e-mail questioning "the political consequences of designating these lands as monuments when ... they're probably not the areas of the country most in need of this designation." And no reference was made to the Kaiparowits Plateau before March 27, when it was mentioned in an e-mail by Tom Jensen, a CEQ staffer. "KM (Katie McGinty) and others may want to rope in the Kaiparowits and Escalante Canyons regions if this package [other areas that were being considered] doesn't seem adequate to the president's overall purpose," Jensen said. The subcommittee staff report concluded that the monument designation was "almost entirely politically motivated to assist the Clinton-Gore re-election effort," and that Clinton had evaded the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)." Following that first report, the subcommittee decided to dig deeper and requested a further review as to whether there was any actual threat posed by development of the Smokey Hollow Mine, as the Andalex project was called. On Nov. 5, 1997, the Resources Committee sent a letter to Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt asking for each version of the Preliminary Draft Environmental Impact Statement (PDEIS) prepared for the Warm Spring Project/Smokey Hollow Mine. The National Environmental Protection Act requires an environmental impact statement (EIS) for almost any project these days, from a supermarket to a coal mine. These are analytical documents evaluating a project's potential impacts to the human environment and offering reasonable alternatives. Significant designations, such as declaring an area a wilderness, also require an EIS. NEPA compliance is overseen by the Council on Environmental Quality. An EIS is drafted by the government agency that oversees the project. For Andalex's Smokey Hollow Mine the Bureau of Land Management and the Office of Surface Mining, Reclamation and Enforcement were jointly responsible. They began work on the EIS in 1990. Private third-party contractors were called on for outside expertise and independent analysis, but were barred from communication with Andalex. Babbitt refused to release the Preliminary Draft of the EIS to the committee, claiming such a document is "privileged" because of the "predecisional" nature of the material. To obtain a copy the Resources Committee had to pry one loose with a subpoena. This was served on Nov. 12, 1997; the requested documents were ponied up a week later. They include all the notes and correspondence on the project. The present report is based on these documents, in particular, the 561-page PDEIS. Here are some of its points and findings:
Sarah Foster is a staff reporter for WorldNetDaily.
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