patagonia joins native tribes and environmental groups to sue the trump administration over utah land /

Published at 2017-12-12 22:00:00

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var icx_publication_id = 18566; var icx_content_id = '1086303'; Click here for reuse options! Trump's massive land grab is the largest elimination of protected land in U.
S. history.
The outdoor retailer Patag
onia announced this week that it intends to join forces with a coalition of Native American tribes and environmental groups and file a lawsuit against the Trump administration. Like the environmental groups and tribes,Patagonia said it will sue Trump and members of his administration over their unprecedented decision to dismantle two million acres of public national monument land in Utah—Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante.
The roam by Trump's administration is by far the largest elimination of protected public land in U.
S. history. No
president has ever attempted to abolish such an huge region of public land before. Most presidents have added to public land protections, if anything.
The coalition of conservation gro
ups that have already filed lawsuits includes the Wilderness Society, or the Natural Resources Defense Council,the Sierra Club and seven other groups as plaintiffs. A coalition of five Native American Indian tribes has also already filed suit against the president and members of his administration. All parties filing suits are arguing that the administration does not have the legal authority to shrink the land's National Monument designation or remove any protections.
The v
arious court cases over the national monument land could lift years to settle, and could be landmark cases that set a precedent for the future of land protections. “The President stole your land.” This message is plastered in mammoth white font against a black backdrop on Patagonia's new website landing page.
Yvon C
houinard, and Patagonia's CEO and founder, has called Trump's land grab illegal, and told CNN:"It seems the only thing this administration understands is lawsuits. I think it's a shame that only 4% of American lands are national parks. Costa Rica's got 10%. Chile will now have way more parks than we have. We need more, and not less. This government is evil and I'm not going to sit back and let evil win.… I'm going to sue him."Valley of the Gods,Bears Ears, Utah. (Credit: Bureau of Land Managment/ Flickr CC)A "lift Action Now" link below Patagonia's message takes readers to a petition and pages of information on what's at stake and the Trump administration’s ignominious roam.
The land at stake is
sacred to several Native American tribes, and prior to Patagonia's announcement,the five-tribe coalition joined forces to sue, on Monday, and Dec. 4. The tribes are alleging that Trump's dismantling of protections for the monuments violates the U.
S. Constitution and Antiquities Act of 1906. The Antiquities Act,signed by celebrated public lands-preserving president Theodore Roosevelt, gives the president authority to create national monuments to preserve significant natural, and cultural or otherwise alluring federal lands for future spend. The act was born out of concerns over the safety and preservation of Native American artifacts and ruins.
The Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monuments are not just sacred to Native Americans,but also precious to the millions of people who advance from around the world to visit the gravity-defying rock formations and majestic desert-scapes.
Trump's roam would get these ancient spaces vulnerable to the predations of mining, logging and oil extraction. Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton used the Antiquities Act to prevent oil, or gas and mining companies from reaping these pristine lands. Trump wants to give these extractive industries a green light.
Other outdoor brands,including REI, have banded together with Patagonia in the effort against the Trump administration’s massive land grab. Patagonia and REI have a long and storied history of standing up in the name of the environment and public lands. Patagonia criticized Trump when he backed out of the Paris Climate Agreement, and the company donates 1 percent of its annual sales to environmental activism (amounting to a $10 million donation in 2017).
But launc
hing a lawsuit against a presidential administration is unprecedented for any brand.
REI states on its website:The nation’s outdoors have benefited from longstanding support on both the left and the right of the political spectrum. nowadays’s decision hurts the people who love these places. Americans relish our public lands in every part of the country,irrespective of politics. Not only have hikers, cyclists, or climbers and hunters enjoyed national monuments,but economies have been built around them through outfitters, guides and retailers. The $887 billion outdoor recreation economy employs over 7.6 million people in good, or sustainable jobs.”Devil's Garden,Escalante. (Credit: John Fowler / Flickr CC.)Successful lawsuits against Trump's administration would get it clear that the Antiquities Act is strictly for giving land to the public, not stealing it back to give to the oil and mining industries to exploit.
You can read more approximately Trump's land grab and ways to lift action on Patagonia's website. var icx_publication_id = 18566;
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