Jewell unaware of any plan to designate Owyhee monument
Addressing a question hard on the minds of Southeast Oregon residents, U.S. Interior Secretary Sally Jewell said during a congressional hearing March 1 that she knows of no plans to designate an Owyhee Canyonlands national monument.
Responding to a question from Rep. Greg Walden, who represents Eastern Oregon, Jewell said the concept was brought up by Keen Footwear of Portland.
“It’s been kicking around, it’s one of the things people have recommended to us,” Jewell said.
But she said the Interior Department, which includes the BLM and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, has held no community meetings or discussions about the idea.
“People haven’t been actively in my office asking about it,” Jewell told Walden.
Walden asked if there has been any coordination between the White House and Department of Interior on the issue.
“Not that I’m aware of,” Jewell replied.
The Bend-based environmental group Oregon Natural Desert Association, backed by the Keen Footwear, has proposed a 2.5 million acre Owyhee Canyonlands wilderness and conservation area. Critics say the area is bigger than the Yellowstone, Yosemite or Grand Canyon national parks and would cover 40 percent of Oregon’s Malheur County.
Local opposition is strong. Opponents believe designation would prohibit or severely restrict grazing, mining, hunting and other recreation. Proponents have said traditional land uses will be allowed, but opposition leaders say they don’t believe them.
Opponents worry President Obama will establish the wilderness and conservation area under the federal Antiquities Act, which can be done by presidential order and does not require approval of Congress.
In February he designated three such monuments in the California desert: Mojave Trails National Monument, Sand to Snow National Monument, and Castle Mountains National Monument. They cover almost 1.8 million acres.
Walden and others believe an Owyhee Canyonlands designation would be economically and socially harmful to an area still reeling from the armed takeover of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge. Walden has called upon the administration to ease tension in the rural West by backing away from the proposal.
On other topics, Walden thanked Jewell for her support of collaborative sage grouse conservation work but said it was frustrating that an environmental group filed a lawsuit over the work. Habitat conservation agreements signed by ranchers and other private landowners were credited with helping keep the Greater sage grouse off the federal endangered species list.
Walden also asked about local reimbursement for costs associated with the 41-day occupation of the wildlife refuge. An analysis by Oregonian/OregonLive estimated the cost in law enforcement presence, school closures, supplies and other items at $3.3 million.
“Because this was a federal facility, and because most of the people who were there were not from Harney County, let alone from the state of Oregon, I do hope the federal government will help figure out a way to help cover some of the local costs,” Walden said.
Jewell said she’s uncertain how the reimbursement question would be handled. “So that’s certainly something that we’re happy to have dialogue on, but I don’t know what the rules are,” she said.