The Paria townsite area on the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument is home to some incredible geology that reflects a past when water covered the area then receded or evaporated in cycles over thousands of years. These cycles of wetness and dryness laid the foundation for the layers of color we see today in sedimentary formations throughout the Monument.

Photo provided by Jackie Grant, 2025.

Dear Supporter of Grand Staircase,


It's Earth Day! We will be partnering with the Xerces Society and joined by Hogle Zoo staff for bumble bee survey training this May 20, 21, & 22 in Kanab and Escalante, Utah. Visit the Bumble Bee Atlas Bioblitz page to register for your preferred date and location. Some of you may have received a slightly different version of this email yesterday, but I didn't want any bumble bee lovers to miss out on the opportunity in May.


You may be following the saga of the Congressional Review Act (CRA), and its potential to cause turmoil on the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument and public lands throughout the United States. As a refresher, the CRA is a congressional tool that can be used to remove certain kinds of agency-created "rules" without public input. Denying public input in itself is alarming, but the denial of public input is followed by a problematic prohibition on the issuance of any "substantially similar" rules by the agency. GSEP joined a large coalition to voice opposition to using the CRA against the Monument. You can hear some of my thoughts during an interview with @DuctTapethenBeer that was supported by businesses that belong to The Conservation Alliance.


The CRA has the potential to remove protections on Federal lands that have been "withdrawn," which means the lands are not available for new extraction projects. We just saw the CRA used to allow mining in the headwaters of the nation's most visited wilderness, the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument's resource management plan is up next, with the possibility of a vote as early as the week of May 4.


The Monument's resource management plan (RMP) is a document that provides guidance on how to use the land while maintaining its integrity, value, and ecological functions. Thirty-four public and stakeholder meetings were held virtually and in communities around the Monument to gather feedback about the RMP before it was published. The Department of the Interior read and responded to all 13 "inconsistencies" submitted by the Utah Governors Office during the State's privileged review of the RMP. Finally, an independent Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument Advisory Committee (GSENMAC) was created to identify anything else that was missing from the RMP, and it consisted of representatives from the stakeholder groups below:

  • Garfield County
  • Kane County
  • State Government
  • Tribal Interests
  • Education
  • Developed Outdoor Recreation
  • Conservation
  • Private Landowners
  • Dispersed Recreation
  • Ecologists
  • Paleontologists
  • Archaeology


It seems to be quite a stretch to claim that local communities were not heard after reviewing the efforts to which the Bureau of Land Management went to gather and document public input, science, data, and loudly voiced opinions. Public land should not be managed based on opinions.


GSEP is deeply involved in the conversations around the CRA. We are working with other nonprofit partners to make information and perspectives available to the general public. We participated in a trip to Capitol Hill to speak with legislators about the purpose and importance of resource management plans. We are working very hard to identify how to keep protecting the land and water encompassed by Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument - regardless of how the CRA is used.


In the meantime, we continue to steward the land by picking up trash and pulling out invasive weeds; restore the land by removing non-native, habitat altering Russian olive trees; and conserve natural resources by collecting seeds for future restoration projects.


Thank you for sticking with us, and do remember to celebrate Earth Day!


-Jackie

Your donations enable our stewardship, education, and restoration of the Monument and its connected landscapes and watersheds.

GSEP Newsletter for April, 2026


Welcome new staff!



This month we welcome our new Restoration Technician, Gabe Brown! In 2024, Gabe was the Overall Volunteer of the Year for the fabulous nonprofit, Sageland Collaborative. Gabe helped one of Utah's special toads, the boreal toad, and volunteered as a part of the Wildlife Watch Camera Response Team.


We are so excited to work with Gabe on our Russian olive removal and low tech process based restoration work in the Escalante River Watershed. Gabe joins Katie and Alex in the Restoration team as a seasonal technician.

UTAH GIVES


On April 30, you can help protect and restore one of the most remarkable landscapes in the American West. We’re joining Utah Gives, Utah’s statewide spotlight on generosity: a day when nonprofits across the state come together under one banner to inspire giving and strengthen our communities.


Early Giving is now open for Utah Gives Day!


Right now, Grand Staircase is facing renewed challenges that could undo years of work protecting this landscape.


Your early gift helps support on-the-ground stewardship from volunteer restoration projects to protecting sensitive desert ecosystems.


You don’t have to wait until April 30 to make an impact.


Give early and step up for Grand Staircase.



Toadstool Portable Toilets


The Toadstool Hoodoos area is an extremely popular area on the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. It is so popular that the BLM put a pair of portable toilets and a dumpster in the trail's parking area. At certain times of the year, however, the area is so popular that two toilets are not enough! You can imagine what is happening to the toilets during the busy months of the year.


We approached the BLM to ask how we could help with the overflowing portable toilets, and we are now working with them, Kane County, and the service provider to schedule and pay for an extra servicing of the toilets each week during the busy months.


We were fortunate to be able to install a new donation box at the Kanab Visitor Center this year, and we will use those funds to support clean toilets. If you stop at the visitor center, and appreciate a clean toilet, please let us know with a donation or a word of thanks! The Escalante Visitor Center also hosts a donation box, and you may run into one of our dedicated Trail Ambassadors who volunteers at the front desk.


Our volunteer Trail Ambassadors and GSEP staff continue to be a great help to BLM staff and Monument visitors because a third wave of early retirements and voluntary job departures was announced earlier this month. Monument staff are a fraction of what they once were.

Trail Ambassadors are an important part of preventive search and rescue, and they help us identify problems in high visitation areas on the Monument.


Photo provided by GSEP Staff, 2026.

PAWtners!


Welcome to a whole slew of canine friends who support the Monument: Loki, Dasher, Pogo, Smokey, Ms. MillieVanillie, and Puq who all recently became official GSEP PAWtners!


Your Monument companion can be a PAWtner too, for a $25 annual donation. In return, you will receive a special PAWtners sticker, your pet's photo in our gallery, and a digital toolkit that reviews desert safety and etiquette.


Becoming a PAWtner means your four-legged friend joins a community of animal lovers who care about Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. Our program informs visitors about hazards specific to the region, explains pet etiquette expectations, and recognizes the pet that has made your trips to the Monument so special.


Your donation helps support restoration, education, and stewardship efforts to ensure these lands and the adventures they inspire last for generations to come.


Welcome to our new PAWtners, and say hello if you run into them on the Monument.

Loki

Pogo

Puq

Dasher

Smokey

Ms. MillieVanillie

We want to hear from you!

In the last couple of months, GSEP participated in a variety of public outreach events, one of which was participating in the Grand Staircase Regional Guide Association's Outfitters and Guides Workshop to teach local guides about bat biology, evolution, and management practices that affect the quality of bat habitat on public lands. If you are not a guide and want to learn more about bats, Dr. Grant will be leading a Bat Trivia Night and Listening Activity during the Escalante Canyons Art Festival in September. She will be joined by Dr. Nicki Frey from Utah State University. Tickets are free, but are also going quickly.


To counter some of the grim news, this month's question will be more lighthearted, and will ask about (you guessed it) BATS!

Which of the following bat facts is the most surprising to you? They are all true!

Thank you for your ongoing support.



We couldn't do it without you!


Jackie Grant (she/her/hers)

Executive Director

Grand Staircase Escalante Partners | gsenm.org
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