Environmentalists Slam Bush's Departing Proposal As "Fire Sale" For Oil And Gas Industry

PAUL FOY | November 16, 2008 03:19 PM EST | AP

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SALT LAKE CITY — The view of Delicate Arch natural bridge _ an unspoiled landmark so iconic it's on Utah's license plates _ could one day include a drilling platform under a proposal that environmentalists call a Bush administration "fire sale" for the oil and gas industry.

Late on Election Day, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management announced a Dec. 19 auction of more than 50,000 acres of oil and gas parcels alongside or within view of Arches National Park and two other redrock national parks in Utah: Dinosaur and Canyonlands.

The National Park Service's top official in the state calls it "shocking and disturbing" and says his agency wasn't properly notified. Environmentalists call it a "fire sale" for the oil and gas industry by a departing administration.

Officials of the BLM, which oversees millions of acres of public land in the West, say the sale is nothing unusual, and one is "puzzled" that the Park Service is upset.

"We find it shocking and disturbing," said Cordell Roy, the chief Park Service administrator in Utah. "They added 51,000 acres of tracts near Arches, Dinosaur and Canyonlands without telling us about it. That's 40 tracts within four miles of these parks."

Top aides to Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne stepped into the fray, ordering the sister agencies to make amends. His press secretary, Shane Wolfe, told The Associated Press that deputy Interior Secretary Lynn Scarlett "resolved the dispute within 24 hours" last week.

A compromise ordered by the Interior Department requires the BLM to "take quite seriously" the Park Service's objections, said Wolfe.

However, the BLM didn't promise to pull any parcels from the sale, and in an interview after the supposed truce, BLM state director Selma Sierra was defiant, saying she saw nothing wrong with drilling near national parks.

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"I'm puzzled the Park Service has been as upset as they are," said Sierra.

"There are already many parcels leased around the parks. It's not like they've never been leased," she said. "I don't see it as something we are doing to undermine the Park Service."

Roy and conservation groups dispute that, saying never before has the bureau bunched drilling parcels on the fence lines of national parks.

"This is the fire sale, the Bush administration's last great gift to the oil and gas industry," said Stephen Bloch, a staff attorney for the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance.

"The tracts of land offered here, next to Arches National Park or above Desolation Canyon, these are the crown jewels of America's lands that the BLM is offering to the highest bidder," he said.

An examination of the parcels, superimposing low-resolution government graphics onto Google Earth maps, shows that in one case drilling parcels bordering Arches National Park are just 1.3 miles from Delicate Arch.

"If you're standing at Delicate Arch, like thousands of people do every year, and you're looking through the arch, you could see drill pads on the hillside behind it. That's how ridiculous this proposed lease sale is," said Franklin Seal, a spokesman for the environmental group Wildland CPR.

In all, the BLM is moving to open 359,000 more acres in Utah to drilling.

Other Utah leases that are certain to draw objections from conservation groups include high cliffs along whitewater sections of Desolation Canyon, which is little changed since explorer John Wesley Powell remarked in 1896 on "a region of wildest desolation" while boating down the Green River to the Grand Canyon.

Others extend to plateaus populated by big game atop Nine Mile Canyon, site of thousands of ancient rock art panels, Moab's famous Slick Rock Trail and a campground popular with thousands of mountain bikers.

Sierra, the BLM's director for Utah, said the Park Service was consulted on the broad management plans that made the sale of parcels next to national parks permissible, even if it was not given notice on which specific leases were being offered. She apologized for that omission but said notice wasn't legally required.

She said national parks want to keep oil and gas wells five to 10 miles away "but that policy doesn't exist."

Roy said the standard for an eyesore visible from a national park turns on what a "casual" observer might see.

The hostility carried over into an e-mail exchange between Sierra and Mike Snyder, the Denver-based regional Park Service director, who noted his agency's demand that BLM pull 40 to 45 drill parcels from the auction list. "You stated that you were not willing to do this," Snyder wrote Nov. 6.

Within hours, Sierra responded "These decisions and the lands available for leasing should come to no one's surprise," according to copies of the e-mails obtained from her office.

Sierra said she instructed her district and field managers to educate the park superintendents on why drilling is OK "adjacent to and near the park boundaries."

In the e-mail, Sierra boasted of having "a very good working relationship" with Roy, the federal coordinator in Utah for the Park Service, but in an interview he said he had "no idea this sale was coming down the pike."

Roy said that when he asked Sierra what was going on, she replied: "We added some tracts, sorry we didn't notify you. We can take up these concerns when we issue" drilling permits. He said his response was: "Holy cow."

Sierra didn't dispute this account, but said "I don't think I was in a mood that dismissed his concerns lightly." She said she had promised only to review the objections, parcel by parcel, before the auction is held Dec. 19.

___

On the Net:

Arches Nat'l Park: http://www.nps.gov/arch/

SALT LAKE CITY — The view of Delicate Arch natural bridge _ an unspoiled landmark so iconic it's on Utah's license plates _ could one day include a drilling platform under a proposal that enviro...
SALT LAKE CITY — The view of Delicate Arch natural bridge _ an unspoiled landmark so iconic it's on Utah's license plates _ could one day include a drilling platform under a proposal that enviro...
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Had a lot of fun visiting Utah. What a great place. I wish I could go back and see Park City. That would be great!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:36 PM on 11/24/2008

Well, love him or hate him, the time is coming near to say goodbye to George W. Bush. I would like to extend an invitation to anyone who has something to say to this President to post an open letter to GW at http://goodbye.us . This is a project to essentially create a time capsule of feelings and thoughts about the outgoing administration. So please, check it out and share!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:52 PM on 11/19/2008

Recently released books and news reports unveil actionable collusion, popular deception, and theft of US assets perpetrated, for decades, by American (?) Oil Companies. In my lifetime they have not done anything for this country. They have derailed any efforts to develop alternative energy resources, pumped oil from US land and sold it to the highest bidder, encouraged (with auto industry help) the growth of auto usage at the expense of public transportation, and have failed to pay anything for much of the US land "leased" to them for drilling.

The profits they have made this year, considering the shape of our economy (last quarter, Exxon/Mobil netted 14.6 billion dollars--the highest quarterly profit for any corporation in history, on this planet, and surpassing their previous record of 11 billion earlier this year) are a moral outrage. The Oil Companies have been receiving tax breaks all the while.

Who in our Government is responsible? Well, which party was chanting "Drill Baby Drill" at their convention. Meanwhile, Bush and Cheney are exercising a scorched Earth strategy, hoping, no doubt, to leave the Country without the means to bring themselves, or others involved, to justice.

Congress must act!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:23 PM on 11/19/2008
- Dayahka I'm a Fan of Dayahka 33 fans permalink

Yes, what Bush is doing is criminal, but we've known he was a crook for 8 years and done nothing about it. There is one good thing to keep in mind about all these giveaways to the oil companies: it's one thing to have the rights to drill or pump, but it's another thing entirely to have the financial resources to be able to pump or drill. Drilling and pumping can cost millions of dollars for a single source, so those sources have to be chosen carefully. In all likelihood, by the time the oil companies get around to national park land it will be too expensive to do anything; when it costs a barrel of oil to drill for a barrel of oil, maybe long before that actually, it's not worth it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:50 PM on 11/18/2008
- norkas I'm a Fan of norkas 28 fans permalink

The new spritual journey in life that Barak Obama wants to deliver will be surrounded with much needed enviormenta reforms. He is going after the oil companies fast .

Enviormentalist opened there arms to what was a ineffective exclusive club to the masses and have done a GREAT job. They evolved and there passion is unreal as there execution of ideas.

Barak Obama and many others stand with our concerns and our passion to change our enviormenental destructive ways quickly and bring in a era where mother earth comes first.

We are all sick of what the oil companies , mining, and others have been doing to the planet and need quick decisive solutions that have already been brought forward to be voted on to advance the cause of global planet sanity.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:29 AM on 11/19/2008
- pjburns11 I'm a Fan of pjburns11 10 fans permalink
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It's a good time to recall Kucinich's 35 articles of impeachment.

http://thetruthburns.wordpress.com/2008/11/17/forget-impeachment-its-time-to-probe-investigate-indict-bush/

Too late you say? For impeachment, yes. But they also make fine articles of indictment.

Call for investigations

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:53 PM on 11/18/2008

You wanna see ugly oil insanity? GoogleEarth Fort McMurray, Alberta and look at the huge holes in the ground where they are digging out the oil sands. What's even worse is that it take the energy equivelent of two barrels of oil in the form of natural gas to produce three barrels of synthetic crude. I cry for my children......

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:35 PM on 11/18/2008
- maxiemom I'm a Fan of maxiemom 2 fans permalink

This administration has been a disaster from beginning to end. The came in illegitimately in the first place, and the nation has paid a high price for it. The fools who still think these criminals haven't been that bad have absolutely no clue what a bunch of bandits they are, or maybe they just don't give a damn about this country as a whole. This is the worst group of cuttnroats we've ever had in office, and I can't wait until the stench of them is out of this area and out of the government. Let's hope that their crimes against thie country, whether it be against its laws, environment, land, people, wildlife: in short, everything, are exposed when they leave.

Remember: Bush still thinks history will exonerate him. The full extent of this man's crimes against this country need to be examined fully, and fully exploited.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:50 PM on 11/18/2008

Ms. Selma Sierra
State Director
Bureau of Land Management
Utah State Office
P.O. Box 45155
Salt Lake City, UT 84145

Phone: 801-539-4001
Fax: 801-539-4013
Email: blm.govierra@blm.gov

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:55 PM on 11/18/2008

I tried to send a message to the Bureau of Land Management at http://www.blm.gov/wo/st/en/res/feedback.3.html .

However the feedback submit fails.

I guess they are not interested in our comments or opinion.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:42 PM on 11/18/2008

Because they've already heard from the most important people of all - THE BASE

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:58 PM on 11/18/2008
- Grit I'm a Fan of Grit 5 fans permalink

Born and raised in Oklahoma. Ahh there is nothing like the smell of oil soaked mud. Of course there is the white crust on top made by the salt water. Red ants love it. They can have a nest in the middle of an area nothing else cept a few kinds of sticker weeds can live in. Of course there are the pipelines that have to be dug roads to be built electric cable to be run. After all gotta get the drilling rigs in, the pumper tanks in. the pipe to get the oil out. the electric powered pumps to get it outta the ground and pumped through the pipeline. Of course the pickup trucks and various other gang. welding , vacuum trucks etc. And of course it will probably be at least 10 years before the pipeline or a tank springs a leak. Then there are all those beautiful pumps. going up and down like giant teeter totters. Brings dollar signs to any oil mans eyes. And I payed my way through collage working in an oil field gang laying line, fixing leaks, cleaning strainer traps, crawling in oil tanks and scrapping the paraffin out of the bottom . Took about thirty years before I got cancer. Of course all but two I worked with are dead mostly from cancer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:54 PM on 11/18/2008
- OgreDaddy I'm a Fan of OgreDaddy 42 fans permalink
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The people responsible for this should be forced to walk the plank at Dead Horse Point.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:23 AM on 11/18/2008

These people in Utah voted for bush..twice! what do they expect? You get the leaders you deserve.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:33 AM on 11/18/2008

Actually, the people in Grand County, where Arches and Canyonlands NP are located, voted Obama. Check out the electoral map on the NYT site. They break down each state by county.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:26 PM on 11/19/2008

Bro, Bush never ran against Obama. Wrong election.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:14 PM on 11/21/2008
- Chip W I'm a Fan of Chip W 18 fans permalink

Bush should just have renamed the EPA to the Environmental Exploitation Agency.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:22 AM on 11/18/2008

Look, I live in Washington state and we get our oil from Alaska. Guess what! We were paying higher prices than most Americans. It won't change if we drill here. Money is the game and let me tell you, they aren't paying the land/mineral owners much. One of the biggest oil stikes ever found is in North Dakota and E. Montana. Looki it up for yourselves. They will still gouge us with some feeble excuse they always make up. We gave over 80 million acres to oil companies and they want more without even exploring what they have. It is a game, like usual. I remember seeing the oil fields in Texas as a kid and they were so UGLY and EVERY FEW FEET, EVERY PLACE. I hoped to never see that site again. This was in the early 50's to the late 50's. We don't need to mine or drill in any national park or anywhere near one. It is still GREED

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:35 AM on 11/18/2008
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I was born and raised right smack dab in the middle of the oil strike you're talking about. It's getting ugly around here--roads always torn up, people getting mugged, no place to rent, people livin in tents and rv's(winter's coming so I don't see that happening for much longer)--we have to lock our doors now--and we still pay the most in the nation for our gas and heating--go figure--oh, and we did get a small oil lease--whoop de doo--$1500--sure as hell doesn' pay for the change in the landscape--oil pumping rigs all over--and they're noisy too--especially if they're not yours

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:27 AM on 11/18/2008

Greenriverkate, I'm so glad you brought up that giant oil field in ND. I've read that it is the largest in the US and one of the largest discovered on earth. Have you noticed that no one in Washington really ever mentions it? Supposedly, I've read, tapping into it would make the US oil self-sufficient for 100 years.

Yet, no one really discusses it. No mention from the likes of Palin or McCain in their campaign. Why is this so ignored? You'd think every oil-dependent American would be clamoring for news about it and demanding to know when prices will fall.

I don't get it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:07 PM on 11/18/2008

There's the Brakken Deposit of oil I believe is very large. The really big problem is that our "leaders" (even Biden) mouth the Petroleum Institute (owned and fed the bull of giant oil corporations) that America has "only 3% of the world's oil". This is utterly false and is propaganda to keep the price of oil very high. See the article in the Washington Post, "Snake Oil" examined this lie on Sept 3, 2008. Essentially, America has much much more oil. The 3% figure came from 1981 seismic data which only focused on the Gulf of Mexico and was used to keep a moratorium on offshore drilling. Well, golly. New MMS seismic data (Minerals Mining Service) show America has much more oil. Offshore drilling has improved vastly since then. Guess what? It pays the big oil giants to keep Americans in the dark that WE OWN the public oil that is being leased to the oil giants who then sell it back to us at high dollar OPEC prices.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:22 AM on 11/19/2008

We can do without the oil if we only try. We started an eco farm.
We are not completely without fossil fuels..but we are getting closer without spending a fortune. We have cut our fossil fuel use by 50% over 4 years. Added insulation, led and cfl bulbs(leds are expensive but last 10 to 30 years. sealing up air leaks. Black out insulated curtain liners , 20 or 25$ per window. We use a kero heater, but on cold but sunny days we open the blinds and curtains. Cook in covered pots, save 30% of the power for cooking , use a small toaser oven to bake smaller meals. I have plans i got to build a solar oven, that gets to 300 degrees, and when its not cooking it can be ducted to the basement. unplug or use a plug strip to turn off things like microwave ovens and coffee makers 10 and 5 watts on stand by, same for tvs and puter screens, I have a 19" flat screen 40 watts instead of 200 as with a CRT screen. Our house is more comfy, it is amazing how much cold or hot can come thru the slider door glass.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:53 PM on 11/17/2008
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