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Home arrow News arrow Letters to the Editor arrow Washington County land bill is pushed hard in D.C. 11.16.06 PDF Print E-mail
Washington County land bill is pushed hard in D.C. 11.16.06

Washington County land bill is pushed hard in D.C.

Utah's Bennett and Matheson back it; two local politicians who are brothers may have financial interest in outcome

By Christopher Smart
The Salt Lake Tribune
Salt Lake Tribune

Article Last Updated:11/16/2006 01:28:25 AM MST

 

ST. GEORGE - Hearings resume today in the U.S. Senate on a bill that pits pro-growth Washington County commissioners and developers against those who fear it will add tens of thousands more residents to what already is one of the nation's fastest growing areas.
    Utah Sen. Bob Bennett and Rep. Jim Matheson are trying to push their multifaceted land bill through the lame-duck Congress before January. When the Democrats take over leadership, the likelihood of passage plunges for the measure, which could lead to the sale of 25,000 acres of public lands to private interests.
    At least two local politicians - Commissioner Alan Gardner and his brother, Larry Gardner, who sits on the St. George City Council - could have a financial interest in the outcome of the legislation.
    Environmentalists, some local officials and residents oppose the plan, which also outlines a route for a new highway through tortoise habitat in the Red Cliffs Desert Preserve that potentially could link a development in which the Gardner brothers have a financial interest and land they own to Interstate 15.     Proponents argue the bill is necessary for Utah's Dixie to grow and defines such things as utility rights of way as well as wilderness. Without it, land-use planning will be determined piecemeal in lawsuits, they contend. And everyone will suffer.
    In a statement Tuesday, Bennett explained that the number of acres to be transferred from public to private sectors could be far less than 25,000. In addition, the so-called northern corridor highway could pass through tortoise habitat areas only after study and approval by the secretary of Interior.
    About 84 percent of Washington County is federal land, said Alan Gardner, who helped frame the legislation. He maintains there is an important need to transfer some of that land to private control.
    "We don't anticipate that it would all become rooftops," he said. "But we do need to broaden our tax base and this resolves a lot of issues."
    Gardner is to testify today in favor of the bill before the Senate Subcommittee on Public Lands and Forests.
    Gardner and his brother have a financial interest in the development of the Ledges housing development near Snow Canyon on the west side of St. George and own other property in the area. The proposed highway could run from Interstate 15 north of St. George through the Red Cliffs Desert Preserve to near the Gardners' property that straddles State Route 18.
    Bruce Wilson, a Washington City resident, questions whether the Gardners would benefit personally from the bill by boosting land values.
    Larry and Alan Gardner say that if the highway is constructed, it won't be for years and their land will already be developed.
    But Wilson said his broader point is whether the Gardners and others tied to real estate and development who are behind the bill can separate personal benefit from the interest of the county as a whole.
    Although Springdale Realtor Lin Alder wasn't invited to testify, he also will be in Washington, D.C., today, working behind the scenes in an effort to convince lawmakers not to endorse the bill. He will carry a petition signed by about 1,700 Washington County residents asking senators to hold off on passing the legislation.
    Alder, who heads up a community group called Citizens for Dixie's Future, said the process that gave rise to Bennett's proposal was flawed and it would dramatically increase growth in Washington County.
    "The bill was dreamed up by a select few and is not a community plan. That's why the community doesn't buy it."
    Although the municipalities of Santa Clara, Enterprise, La Verkin and Hurricane have endorsed the bill, Rockville, Virgin and Springdale have voted against it. The towns of Ivins, Washington City, Leeds, St. George and Toquerville have not endorsed the legislation, but have not voiced opposition either.
    The proposal has fostered debate among Washington County residents like never before, Alder said. An outgrowth has been an all-inclusive general planning process called Vision Dixie instigated by the Nature Conservancy, among others.
    "We want a better plan for Washington County," Alder said. "Our simple request is to give us time to complete Vision Dixie" before federal legislation is passed.
    Bennett, however, argues that his legislation is "complementary" to Vision Dixie. Those asking to hold off until Vision Dixie is completed really only want to "stall or kill this bill," he said.
    Although the Washington County Commission sought to be inclusive when first defining the proposal, critics say the open process got sidetracked. Somewhere along the line, a 20-member working collaborative was dissolved without the knowledge of environmentalists, said one of its members, Scott Groene, executive director of the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance.
    "The group was created to see if there could be some agreement. But it was disbanded and there never was any real collaboration," he said. "There are numerous problems with this bill. It was drafted behind closed doors."
    Groene said the legislation is "a rip-off of taxpayers, terrible for wilderness," and will result in "sprawl on steroids."
    But Alan Gardner defends the process for public participation. "We had a major process with public input," he said. "It's a good compromise. We ended up with a lot more wilderness than I thought we would have."
    The bill identifies 221,000 acres to become federally protected wilderness. However, 123,743 of them are within Zion National Park and already protected.
    The legislation also sets aside for preservation 170 miles of the Virgin River and its tributaries as a Wild and Scenic River.
    St. George Mayor Dan McArthur said the bill is necessary for the county to move forward because, among other things, it helps define wilderness, riparian areas and utility and transportation corridors.
    For McArthur's city, the proposed northern bypass highway between I-15 and State Route 18 is essential to relieve traffic snarls.
    "We've got a lot of congestion and we need an alternate route," he said. "It's always been in our master plan but the preserve has interfered with it."
    To a broader extent, the legislation will help define for Washington County cities what they can and cannot do, McArthur noted.
    "Anytime we turn around in Washington County we have environmental groups suing us. We tend to have things pushed down our throats because there is so much federal land."
    About 40 percent of the county's 140,000 residents have moved to Washington County since 2000. Some projections say the population will grow to about 350,000 in the next 25 years without additional private lands, said Springdale Mayor Pat Cluff, who opposes the land bill.
    Selling public land for development would lead to further population growth and would make necessary a proposed water pipeline from Lake Powell to Washington County, she said. That, in turn, would result in even more population.
    "I'm not against growth. We're going to have it anyway," she said. "But we want to protect the things that are the reasons people come here - to have air quality and see the stars and it's quiet here."
    csmart@sltrib.com