Volunteers learn how to do remediation work safely and effectively from our partner at the BLM, Ranger Bob, and Kristen, our Volunteer Program Manager.
Photo provided by Jackie Grant, 2024.
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Dear Grand Staircase,
What a year to have decided to quit my long-time teaching job and take on the reins of Grand Staircase Escalante Partners. The results of the latest US elections will have a direct impact on our work and the status of the Grant Staircase-Escalante National Monument. We will continue to serve in our long-standing support role because the land abides. Our labor will be needed now more than ever.
I expect to see the Bureau of Land Management thrown into administrative disarray, and its funding situation to worsen. I know that the Monument's boundaries will be reduced in size again. This knowledge is saddening, frustrating, and upsetting. We will all need time to process our grief and anger, and not just over what is going to happen to America's public lands.
However, I still have hope and will be spending even more time on the Monument over the next year to document its endangered places, show you its natural splendor, and give voice to its wonder. One of the main reasons I plan on doing this is that, prior to the election, I noticed that internet search results powered by Artificial Intelligence (AI) were decidedly anti-public lands. Was this because of a bias in the algorithm? No, it was not.
AI scrapes data from existing websites and news stories, and many of these stories paint a negative picture of Federal management of our public lands. Utah's spending on anti-public lands advertising campaigns supplies information to AI that feeds the results to people on the internet.
So what can we do?
Keep communicating.
- In July of 2024, we started publishing our newsletters on the web to ensure that the public and web-scrapers could hear our story. You can help by telling your Monument story. Send your stories to us, share your story with the local newspaper, create a blog post, write to your legislator, and let us know what other ways you communicate your passion for the Monument.
- It has been and continues to be essential to show that our public lands have the support of many people.
Donate your time or money to your favorite public lands organization.
- Our volunteer stewardship program began in 2021 and participation has nearly doubled in that time. In 2024 you helped us install 600 feet of fencing that protects springs, remove nearly 1,000 pounds of charcoal, and clean up over 600 square feet of graffiti that marred the Monument's beautiful sandstone walls.
- Our new native plant seed collection program and Tribal partnership comes online in 2025, and will provide new opportunities for service learning and volunteering on the Monument and other public lands.
- Donating your time has an impact on the Monument, is good for your health, and brings us to the last item in our list.
Find or build community.
- You are not alone. Walk with us on our journey to honor the past and safeguard the future of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument through science, conservation, and education.
- Community can be as simple as bringing your neighbor a loaf of bread, or as complicated as developing a national online book club about the value of public lands.
- The poll at the end of this newsletter will provide you with some ideas on how to find or create community.
There is never a dull moment when it comes to public lands in Utah, and the next four years will be no different. Please be aware that many, many organizations are demanding our time and attention in response to the election and its impacts on the Monument.
-Jackie
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Your donations enable our stewardship, education, and conservation work. | |
GSEP Post-election Newsletter 2024
Why keep going?
On October 26, I spent the day with a BLM Backcountry Ranger, Board member, community volunteer, and GSEP staff. We learned about Monument restoration sites and the many other types of work that takes place on this land.
Part of my work that day involved picking up and disposing of human waste left by campers. Yuck.
The election that followed left me feeling the same way.
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Timelapse video of charcoal sifting at an abandoned campfire provided by Jackie Grant, 2024. | |
As the executive director, I am responsible for all aspects of our organization. I was drawn to this position because of my connection to the plants, animals, scenery, science, and recreation opportunities offered by the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. This Monument was the first to be administered by the Bureau of Land Management, and the first to be specifically protected because of its incredible potential for research and scientific discovery.
For example, the Monument has revealed incredible fossil discoveries that help us understand life on Earth and our place within the Earth's evolutionary timeline. Bee biologists, plant scientists, ecologists, and climate scientists have all spent time on the land.
As a scientist, I can't think of a better place to be and neither can the rest of us.
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GSEP Volunteer Program Manager, Kristen, explains why it is important to remove abandoned campfire rings and how to do it safely.
Photo provided by Jackie Grant, 2024.
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At GSEP, we all feel awe and connection to this landscape. We have touched dinosaur tracks and used math to estimate the height of these ancient creatures, not just for the sake of doing some math, but for the sake of learning about ourselves and our history on Earth. We have camped, hiked, and waded the through the Escalante River's crystal clear waters. We have stood in wonder beneath some of the darkest night skies in the continental lower 48 states.
We recognize that working on behalf of the Monument is not all sunshine and rainbows. We accept that some days are going to be spent shoveling up the mess left by others. We also know that some pretty big messes are in the works for the Monument.
Utah legislators have already announced with glee that both of Utah's history-making national monuments (Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante) will be reduced in size. Federal agencies may see their budgets cut and their work devalued.
This leaves organizations like ours to clean up and keep cleaning up the mess. It's worth it.
We plan to keep shoveling.
Join us if you can, and answer this month's poll at the end of the newsletter to learn about ways to create community or give us suggestions for how we might help.
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Top photo: A fire pit about to be deconstructed and cleaned up. We protect ourselves from dust and scorpions with masks and gloves.
Bottom photo: Same site minus the fire pit. Now there is less of a chance that someone might camp in the dry wash where they would be vulnerable to flash flooding.
Photos provided by Jackie Grant, 2024. See our Flickr page for more photos from this event.
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We're grateful to have received a generous donation from the Janet Q. Lawson Foundation to continue our work to protect and preserve Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. Thank you!
Learn how you can support our work.
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GSEP staff, Kristen and Victor, take a well deserved lunch break. Photo provided by Jackie Grant, 2024. | |
Do you own an AirBnb near GSENM or in Utah?
We're seeking funding from the AirBnb Community Fund. You can help!
Email jason@gsenm.org if you're interested in nominating GSEP for the AirBnB Community Fund.
We will a lot of encouragement over the next four years, and we will stand together as a community that understands the importance of an intact Monument landscape.
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Want to start a fundraiser for GSEP?
GoFundMe offers an easy way to raise money for your favorite nonprofit.
- Click the ‘Start a GoFundMe’ button to get started. You’ll be guided by prompts to add fundraiser details and set your goal, which can be changed anytime.
- Share your fundraiser link to reach donors
- Funds are sent securely to the charity you choose (we are lobbying for GSEP, but this works for any group you'd like to support)
Have questions? Email jason@gsenm.org
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Photo provided by Jackie Grant, 2024. | |
We want to hear from you!
Creating community, especially one that is engaged in physical or mental labor, is an excellent approach to feeling better about events that may be out of our immediate control. Please answer the poll below to share your approaches for creating community.
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Which approach to creating community appeals to you the most? | | | |
Thank you for your ongoing support, now more than ever.
We couldn't do it without you!
Jackie Grant (she/her/hers)
Executive Director
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Grand Staircase Escalante Partners | gsenm.org
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