Surrounded by signs that read âProtect Wild Utahâ and âKeep Public Lands In Public Hands,â Regina Lopez-Whiteskunk sang from the Utah Capitol steps, a melody she called a âsounds of the winds.â
âI hope those legislators got disturbed by that very beautiful sound,â Lopez-Whiteskunk, a member of the Ute Mountain Ute tribe, said of the song she wrote during a drive past Bears Ears National Monument.
âIf they didnât get disturbed, I hope they had some peace,â she told several hundred Utahns, dressed in parkas and scarves, who weathered near-freezing temperatures and large snowflakes Saturday afternoon during a rally organized by conservation group Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance.
Prompted by Republican leaderâs âthreatsâ to Utahâs wild lands from a âland grabâ lawsuit and the potential reductions of a pair of national monuments by the incoming Donald Trump administration, SUWA legal director Steve Bloch said the peaceful demonstration asked Utahns to show their support for the protection of public lands.
âThese lands are not for sale,â said Lopez-Whiteskunk. âBut letâs remember, they never were. ... Not today, not ever, not for our future generations.â
The protest, which lasted a cold two hours outside the Capitol, included speeches by Utah Senate Minority Leader Luz Escamilla and poet and conservationist Terry Tempest Williams.
Louise Fernandez, the rallyâs first speaker and a student at Salt Lake Community College studying environmental biology, said the rally is in âdefiance â to say no to the destruction of our home."
âOur ancestors knew that this land is not just our home, but a place that sustains us, nurtures us and connects us to something far greater than ourselves,â she said.
âIf not us, then no one,â Fernandez continued. âIf we do not stand together, our children will never know the beauty these lands hold.â
An hour before the rally, Wilson Webster, 27, and his father, Brett Webster, took their place on the Capitolâs steps, holding a sign twice their size that read âStop the Sellâ and an image of a bulldozer destroying Utahâs Delicate Arch.
For Wilson, whoâs known Utah his âwhole life,â public lands âbelong to Americans â they belong to everybody."
âUtah is undeniably ... one of the most beautiful areas in the entire world,â he said. âThat that might be stripped away for materialistic commodities is a scary, scary thought.â
In August, Gov. Spencer Cox and then-Attorney General Sean Reyes filed a lawsuit to the U.S. Supreme Court challenging whether the Bureau of Land Managementâs âunappropriatedâ ownership of 18.5 million acres of land violates the U.S. Constitution.
âIt is obvious to all of us that the federal government has increasingly failed to keep our lands accessible and properly managed,â said Cox in an August news conference announcing the lawsuit. âUtah deserves priority when it comes to managing this land.â
Utah has paid over $500,000 to a law firm championing the attack on federal control over public lands and has budgeted twice as much on a media campaign to influence public opinion.
SUWA, in December, countered by suing the two Republican leaders, citing that Utah âforever disclaim[ed] all right and title to the unappropriated public landsâ when it became part of the United States.
âIt can feel isolating, sometimes, to think that youâre just a âvoice in the wilderness,â said Bloch of conservation efforts .â[This rally] is really setting down a marker for the Governor, for Legislature ... that Utahns care about their federal public lands.â
Escamilla, welcoming demonstrators to âthe peopleâs house,â said advocating for public lands is a âcollective fight.â
âPublic lands in the state of Utah are not for sale,â said Escamilla. âDemocrats will stand and will continue to stand against ridiculous lawsuits. ... But what we have right now is a need for collective efforts to educate the public about the threatened efforts to basically sell public lands.
Sen. Nate Blouin, D-Salt Lake City, reiterated Escamilla, adding that Republicans âget to do what they wantâ with their supermajority in the Legislature.
âThey set the agenda behind closed doors ... without a whole lot of public input,â Blouin, who attended the rally, told The Salt Lake Tribune. â[For] members of the public, I would encourage folks to come up and speak at committees ... talk to your legislators and tell them your perspective on how this is going to impact your daily life.â
Tempest Williams closed the rally by directly addressing the recently reelected governor who, she said, âhas lost his way.â
âThese open lands do not belong to a single state,â she said, âbut to a state of mind, a state of being open to all species, not just our own governor. We must ask ourselves, as Americans, can we really survive the worship of our own destructiveness?â