National monuments in Idaho, Washington
to remain protected
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[July 15, 2017]
By Keith Coffman
(Reuters) - U.S. Interior Secretary Ryan
Zinke said on Thursday a national monument in Washington state and one
in Idaho are no longer on a list of more than two dozen wilderness sites
being targeted by the Trump administration for possible reduction or
elimination.
Zinke said in a statement that, after taking input from the public, he
would recommend to President Donald Trump that "no modifications" should
be made to the Hanford Reach monument in Washington and the Craters of
the Moon monument in Idaho.
"When the president and I began the monument review process we
absolutely realized that not all monuments are the same and that not all
monuments would require modifications," Zinke said.
In April, Trump ordered the Interior Department to review 27 national
monuments established by his predecessors since 1996 to determine if
they could be reduced in size, or lose their protected status to open up
the areas for mining, drilling or other development.
That executive order has drawn fire from environmental and conservation
groups who fear it is the first step toward rolling back decades of
wilderness preservation.
The public and other stakeholders had until July 10 to weigh in on the
reviews, and environmental advocates said this week more than 2.5
million people had commented on the order.
Hanford Reach, located in southeastern Washington along one of the last
un-dammed segments of the Columbia River, received monument status in
2000 under President Bill Clinton.
Craters of the Moon, a vast area of volcanic lava fields in central
Idaho, was established in the 1920s and was expanded by Clinton in 2000.
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U.S. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke listens to a presentation about
the merits of a monument offshore of Massachusetts, part of his
National Monuments review process, in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.,
June 16, 2017. Picture taken June 16, 2017. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
Zinke did not provide details about how he reached the decision,
instead extolling the virtues of the two sites.
"As a former geologist, I realize Craters of the Moon is a living
timeline of the geologic history of our land on the Great Rift," he
said. Hanford was home to "some of the most well-preserved remnants
of human history in the area," he said.
Craig Gehrke, director of the Idaho chapter of the Wilderness
Society, an environmental advocacy organization, said in a statement
that protecting Craters of the Moon was a "no-brainer."
"But no monument is safe while the proverbial dragnet is being cast
over all others," he said.
A full report on the reviews is set to be released next month.
(Reporting by Keith Coffman in Denver; Editing by Paul Tait)
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