Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Senators Push For National Monument Designation In Greater Canyonlands

map of greater canyonlands
greatercanyonlands.org

Fourteen senators from across the U.S. have penned a letter to President Barack Obama asking him to declare the Greater Canyonlands region a national monument.

The area encompasses Canyonlands National Park and would expand protection to surrounding federal lands.

None of the senators who signed are from Utah, but as Michael Painter from the citizens group Californians for Western Wilderness explained, it’s the federal designation that makes the Greater Canyonlands area a national issue.

“It’s federal land, so it belongs to all Americans and Utah has this spectacular landscape and everyone that goes there falls in love with it,” Painter said.

He said it is the first time the senate has requested that a national monument be created in this way. He added that National Monument status would extend protections for the land, including extended regulations for mineral exploration, archaeological sites and off-road vehicle use.

Senators from as far away as Vermont and Hawaii signed the letter.

After graduating with a B.S. in Anthropology from the University of Utah, Elaine developed a love of radio while working long hours in remote parts of Utah as an archaeological field technician. She eventually started interning for the radio show Science Questions and fell completely in love with the medium. Elaine is currently taking classes at Utah State University in preparation for medical school applications. She is a host of UPR’s 5:30 Newscast and a science writer for the Utah Agricultural Experiment Station. Elaine hopes to bring her experiences living abroad in Turkey and Austria into her work.