“Come to Jesus” group joins radical environmentalists to lock down San Juan

LIFE IS GOOD
If SUWA, the Sierra Club and others of their ilk are not enough, locals now have a group on the Wasatch Front who have been spiritually directed to lock up all Wilderness Study areas in San Juan County for backpackers only.
In the June 20 issue of the Deseret News, a “My View” editorial by George Handley and Stephen Trimble say “we are two of more than 230 people who took part in three years of two-hour ‘Faith and the Land’ dialogues discussing how our faith traditions call on us to care for Utah’s wild lands.”
They continue: “San Juan County exemplifies these extraordinary landscapes with true wilderness character and consists of one of the biggest and most spectacular tracts of wild land remaining in the nation…and it deserves special attention.”
They go on to discuss several specific areas of San Juan County, including Mancos Mesa, Moqui Canyon and the White Canyon Wilderness, as examples where the Bush Administration’s recommendation was to have a network of ORV (off road vehicles) trails to allow a vastly larger percentage of Americans access and enjoyment of these places.
Allowing ORV trails in these places is simply unacceptable to Handley, Trimble and their flock of religiously-enlightened preservationists.
“As much as the good citizens of Monticello, Blanding and the other communities of San Juan care for this land,” say Handley and Trimble, “San Juan County numbers only 14,000 people… while Utah is rapidly approaching three million… more than 80 percent of whom live on the Wasatch Front and rely on such wilderness areas TO TAKE THEIR FAMILIES BACKPACKING. The wild lands of Utah are too precious to allow a small number of people to settle their future.”
Well, my response to this drivel is that these 230 “enlightened” spiritualists on the Wasatch Front, and many other self-anointed saviors of our ancestral lands in San Juan ought to try more tact and less condescension before they publicly announce what ought to be done to our little corner of the world.
Why is it that environmentalists insist that the only way to save the world is to put it off limits to everyone but those in their physical prime and with bank accounts such that they have days and weeks to spend walking through it?
In a perfect world, where people didn’t get older or physically unable to take long hikes with heavy back packs, that philosophy might fly, but 95 percent of the “owners” of America’s public lands will never be able to see the magnificent places in question if a selfish few like Handley and Trimble work to assure only the young, healthy and wealthy can gain access.
While jeeping and backpacking was my favorite recreational activity as a youth, I am getting to the age where lugging life’s necessities on my back through 100 miles of the White Canyon Wilderness is a bit more than I want to tackle at age 66.
Sensible and responsible riders on ATV’s are not going to damage San Juan County. Heavens, if you have ever seen what happens in the bottom of White Canyon every time it rains, you would know that whatever disturbance a pony or an ATV makes is no match for the flood that takes all evidence of mankind into Lake Powell.
It makes my blood boil that so many outsiders want to keep locals from riding through it on a horse or an ATV, even if Mother Nature does the housecleaning every few weeks.
My forebears came into San Juan 130 years ago and battled the Indians, cattle barons, floods, drought, disease and total isolation. On top of all that, the United States Government almost gave all of San Juan County to the Southern Ute Tribe after the Hole-in-the-Rock pioneers had sacrificed everything to tame this wild land.
Let us pray that the current generation will be as successful in winning our battles with those bent on changing our way of life in San Juan as were our tenacious ancestors.
San Juan County already has more land set aside for wilderness, national parks, national monuments, state parks, national recreation areas, wild rivers, along with BLM and Forest Service set asides than 99 percent of all the counties in the United States.
And still the visionaries on the Wasatch Front and all kinds of politicians who have never been here want more…much more. And of course they all think they know better what is best for San Juan than those of us who have built it into the wonderful place it is today. Carpetbaggers, interlopers, spirtualists and politicians be advised: It isn’t going to happen without a fight.
My advice to the Handleys and the Trimbles of the world would be to go back for further discussion with the source of your spiritual “inspiration”. See how your conclusion jibes with “doing unto others as you would be done by”.
Finally, try to fathom the magnitude of your own selfishness in trying to put OUR county off limits to all but a tiny fraction of the 14,000 people who live here and the hundreds of millions of owners of public lands in this nation who do not share your elitist proclivities.

San Juan Record

49 South Main St
PO Box 879
Monticello, UT 84535

Phone: 435.587.2277
Fax: 435.587.3377
news@sjrnews.com
Open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday