Utah Voices Take Grand Staircase Fight to Capitol Hill
When small-town business owners from southern Utah walk the halls of Congress, they bring the heart of the desert with them!
Last month, the Conservation Lands Foundation joined the Grand Staircase Intertribal Coalition consisting of members of Diné, Navajo, Hopi, and Paiute Nations; Friends Grassroots Network partners the Grand Staircase-Escalante Partners and the Grand Staircase Regional Guide Association; the Grand Canyon Trust; and Utah business owners in traveling to Washington D.C. for a powerful advocacy fly-in organized by Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance.
Normally folks who get to travel to our nation’s Capitol are exploring the various historical sights and enjoying a leisurely visit. This time, however, we were there to advocate for the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, which is currently facing a new and unprecedented threat.

The Latest Threat to Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument
Utah Representative Celeste Maloy and Senator Mike Lee have introduced a joint resolution to gut the current monument management plan for Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, which guides everything from the protection of sacred landscapes to the location of new campgrounds.
The monument’s current management plan is the product of a collaborative planning process shaped by Tribal Nations, community input, scientific research, and coordination with local outfitters and guides. Now Utah politicians want to abuse an obscure law known as the Congressional Review Act (CRA) to not only overturn the monument management plan, but to prohibit the BLM from implementing any future “substantially similar” plan.
If this resolution passes Congress and is signed into law, it wipes out the stable “rules of the road” that communities and stakeholders rely on, and replaces long-term management with uncertainty, conflict, and instability for everyone.

What Is the Congressional Review Act and Why Does It Matter?
Enacted in 1996, the CRA is an oversight tool Congress can utilize to overturn certain federal agency actions by issuing and passing resolutions of disapproval. If a CRA joint resolution of disapproval is passed by both chambers of Congress and signed by the President, then the rule being challenged can no longer continue and the agency is prohibited from replicating or promulgating a similar rule in the future, ever.
If Congress approves the joint resolution to overturn the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument management plan, it will create widespread legal uncertainty and undermine the Bureau of Land Management’s ability to manage the cultural, ecological, and outdoor recreational resources found within the monument. Even worse, by overturning the management plan in this way, it bars the agency from issuing a new land-use plan that’s “substantially similar” to the one overturned.

Bipartisan Delegation Fights for Grand Staircase
During the fly-in, Conservation Lands Foundation’s Vice President of Government Affairs David Feinman and Digital Advocacy Associate Director Liz Crandall joined our Friends Grassroots Network partners and local business owners in meetings with federal decision makers. Our delegation included:
- Nathan Waggoner from Escalante Outfitters in Escalate, UT.
- Mel Raider from Willow Canyon Outdoor in Kanab, UT.
- Brandie Hardman from Boulder Mountain Guest Ranch in Boulder, UT.
- Dr. Jacqueline (Jackie) Grant from Grand Staircase-Escalante Partners of Kanab and Escalante, UT.
- Blake Spalding from Hell’s Backbone Grill & Farm of Boulder, UT.
- Eric Swafford from Best Friends Animal Sanctuary of Kanab, UT.
These determined individuals represent so much more than just their physical locations. Among them is an outfitter guide, a hospitality ranch owner, a chef and owner of a beloved award-winning restaurant, a small gear store and coffee shop owner, a representative of the region’s largest employer, and a conservation organization laser-focused on protecting Grand Staircase.

Each fly-in participant shared their story from lived experiences. They spoke about seasonal traffic patterns, visitor spending, job creation, stability for rural communities, and the importance of clear, reliable management. During their meetings with members of Congress, these motivated and inspirational business owners emphasized the importance and need for the current 2025 Monument Management Plan to stay in place not just for the sake of protecting their livelihoods, but also for future generations.
Setting a Dangerous Precedent
Congress has weaponized the CRA to overturn public lands management plans and decisions across tens of millions of acres– from Alaska to Montana and Wyoming– upending the long-standing rules for public lands management. And now Congress is raising the stakes even further, using the CRA to attack some of America’s most iconic landscapes: the Boundary Waters Wilderness in Minnesota and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in Utah. This is an unprecedented escalation and sets a dangerous precedent for the future of America’s public lands.

This advocacy fly-in was organized by Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance with support from the Conservation Lands Foundation. But the true stars of this trip were the members of the Intertribal Coalition, the local business owners, and our Friends Grassroots Network partners who traveled so far to share their personal stories with members of Congress in defense of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument.
Take action to defend Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument by clicking below!
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