The story of the land exchange is about greed, the power of a wealthy real estate developer over politicians and corruption and abuse of power at the BLM. It is also about exploitation of the land for a windfall profit.
The BLM has proposed transferring ownership of nine square miles of public land in the National Monument to the Tribe, a major real estate developer. In exchange the public will receive only two square miles of land. The land given up contains popular trails and destinations, including the Garstin and Skyline trails. It also contains species near extinction and a water course that matters much to life in the desert mountains. The Tribe has refused to commit to preservation efforts of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife after the exchange.
Even if the Tribe does not develop all of the land it receives in the exchange, through technicalities in environmental protection laws the exchange will enable the Tribe to develop other land in the Coachella Valley that would otherwise be illegal to develop. This will result in a windfall gain to the Tribe.
The BLM’s environmental impact statement is a sham. It was written under the watchful eyes of the Tribe and their political cronies. It is not an assessment of environmental impacts. It is a cynical legal maneuver in a fight to profit from public lands.
If you ever saw the movie Avatar, you know this story. A real estate developer with the backing of the U.S. government wants to exploit the land for a windfall profit. We must try to stop it before the felling of the tree.
