Commissioners report progress on public-lands talks, Kaibab restoration funding and road project hurdles
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Summary
A committee member reported meetings with DOI liaisons and special counsel about public-lands issues, cited a regional restoration package that includes major funding for Kaibab Forest restoration, and described funding and legal hurdles for the Coral Peak Sand Dunes Road maintenance project.
A committee member (S6) reported to the Kane County Resource Committee on April 15 that county officials met with Department of the Interior liaisons, special counsel and regional partners to press public-lands priorities, forest restoration and road maintenance.
S6 said the county is part of a collaborative effort across Arizona and Utah that includes NGOs and neighboring counties and that the regional plan "includes half of 1,000,000,000 for Kaibab Forest restoration," which the speaker described as a major funding demonstration for adaptive, proactive forest management including vegetation treatments, grazing, thinning and harvesting. S6 said he is encouraged by progress.
S6 also reported that Zion National Park will not move forward with a reservation-only timed entry for now, but that large-vehicle restrictions are expected to take effect in early June. He noted personnel changes at Bryce and said Glen Canyon/Lake Powell operations may shift certain dock or buoy responsibilities to neighboring counties for the near term.
On road projects, S6 said the county obtained more than $12,000,000 in state and federal funds (no local dollars) to maintain Coral Peak Sand Dunes Road to prepare for increased traffic from Zion closures. He said legal challenges and intervening-party filings delayed earlier plans but that recent court developments reopened the process and UDOT/Arizona coordination on the Arizona side of the road is ongoing.
Committee members asked clarifying questions about which road segments were included and how interagency coordination with ADOT/Arizona would proceed; S6 said he expects construction timing to shift to next year due to the hurdles but that coordination continues.
