It's the economy, stupid

Psst, Zinke — national monuments create jobs just the way they are!

Published August 27, 2017 8:00PM (EDT)

Rock formations in Gold Butte, which President Barack Obama designated as a national monument.  (AP)
Rock formations in Gold Butte, which President Barack Obama designated as a national monument. (AP)

This article originally appeared on Grist

Psst, Zinke — national monuments create jobs just the way they are! Ahead of Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke’s Thursday announcement regarding the fate of the bundle of national monuments under review, Democrats tried to level with the conservative on his own terms.

Joint Economic Committee Democrats created a packet of fact sheets urging Zinke to keep monuments as they are for their economic benefits. “Conservation of these lands creates an economic engine that can be sustained for generations,” said a statement from the office of Senator Martin Heinrich, the group’s ranking member.

The areas around national monuments benefit from substantial revenue from activities such as recreation, service jobs, and tourism, as the Committee’s report outlines. For example, travel and tourism account for 44 percent of private employment in the region surrounding Utah’s Grand Staircase-Escalante.

So far, Zinke has said he’d maintain designations for six of the 27 monuments. But he hasn’t yet revealed a final decision on contentious spots like Grand Staircase or Bears Ears, both in Utah.

Zinke’s June recommendations to President Trump hinted that Bears Ears might lose some of its land — despite that the majority of public comments implored DOI to leave the monument as it is.


By Emma Foehringer Merchant