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Let it die 12.7.06
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Let it die: Give up on ill-advised Washington County
bill
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Tribune Editorial
Salt Lake Tribune
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Article Last Updated:12/06/2006 08:47:25 PM MST
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Observing Sen. Bob Bennett's talent for attaching his pet
projects to spending bills as they rapidly pass by is rather like watching
one's teenage son hot-wire a car.
It is unquestionably a special talent, but not necessarily
one to be proud of.
Bennett was more than ready to add his misbegotten
Washington County Growth and Conservation Act to any of the last-minute
appropriations bills that were to be taken up in this week's lame-duck
session. But, he said Tuesday, there became no point in doing so when he
learned that House leaders would not accept the measure.
That's good news.
Better news would be to hear that Bennett and his
co-sponsor, Rep. Jim Matheson, will now await the outcome of the Vision Dixie
planning process, now just getting started in the St. George environs, before
putting up any new proposals.
The Bennett-Matheson bill would have hot-wired the needed
process of making some real and sustainable development plans for the
mushrooming population of the St. George-Zion National Park area. It would
have put the cart before the horse in so many ways, most obnoxiously by
allowing the sale of 24,300 acres of federal land and channeling much of the
estimated $1 billion in proceeds back to local projects.
Once a real planning process has been carried out, we may
well find out that selling 24,000 acres - or more - makes sense. But we don't
know that now. We particularly don't know which 24,000 acres should be sold,
or what benefit the people of the United States should expect in
return.
This was a case of congressional gridlock providing a
great public service. Bennett and Matheson should let this bad idea die.
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