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Colo. Could Benefit from Utah's Stance on Public Lands

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Tuesday, February 21, 2017   

DENVER – A backlash against policy assaults on public land is growing, and now, a conference of outdoor retailers has decided to leave Utah over that state's position on the issue.

The Outdoor Industry Association, which has held its giant trade shows in Salt Lake City for two decades, says it will seek a new home for its Outdoor Retailer shows in 2018. It's a direct response to Utah Gov. Gary Herbert's opposition to the newly-created Bears Ears National Monument.

Luis Benitez, director of Colorado's Outdoor Recreation Industry Office, says many states will make a play for these trade shows, but Colorado has an especially good case.

"We're the first state in the country to actually have a Public Lands Day, a day set aside to officially celebrate our public lands," he said. "And so, I think when you have something like that, it really shows a deep commitment as a state towards the value of that."

Colorado's Legislature has defeated proposals to sell off public lands and has promoted its new national monuments. By contrast, Utah Rep. Rob Bishop has led the charge to get Congress to transfer federal public land into state hands.

Benitez says the controversy in Utah is about more than a trade show, and has helped galvanize stakeholders nationwide to protect public lands.

President Donald Trump's nominee for Interior Secretary, Ryan Zinke, has said if he is confirmed, one of his first trips will be to Bears Ears, which is sacred to local tribes, but also coveted by ranchers and oil and gas interests.

Ron Hunter is the environmental activism manager with the retailer Patagonia, a member company of the Outdoor Industry Association that runs the conference. He says his company is pulling out of the next two OIA shows, still under contract to take place in Salt Lake later this year.

"We believe that public lands should stay in public hands," he said. "And perhaps, we don't know, but the state delegation and the governor want to privatize some of that land, sell it off to oil and gas developers, let's say. And we think there's a higher value to these public lands than that."

Hunter says Patagonia also objects to a proposal to shrink the boundaries of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in southern Utah. The Outdoor Retailer Show brings an estimated $45 million into the local economy each year.


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