Friday, October 29, 2004

Initiative 1, N-waste, Road rules, Transportation

Initiative 1 a weighty decision
http://www.transcriptbulletin.com/200410281.phtml
Tooele Transcript Bulletin; Oct. 28, 2004

Initiative 1 close
http://www.sltrib.com/utah/ci_2433708
Salt Lake Tribune; Oct. 29, 2004

Utahns are taking battle over nuclear waste to top court
http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,595101637,00.html
Deseret News; Oct. 29, 2004

Comments taken opposing changes to roadless rule
http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,595101699,00.html
Deseret News; Oct. 29, 2004

Transportation task force to make recommendations
http://www.harktheherald.com/print.php?sid=38629
Daily Herald; Oct. 29, 2004

Wednesday, October 27, 2004

Wilderness, N-waste, Flouride, Senate Race Land Issues, Transportation

Editorial: (Wilderness) Once Gone, Gone Forever
LA Times; Oct. 27, 2004

Once N-waste arrives, it’s not likely to leave
Tooele Transcript Bulletin; Oct. 26, 2004

Fluoride foes press case to packed house
Davis County Clipper; Oct; 26, 2004

Editorial: support Davis fluoride
Deseret Morning News; Oct 27, 2004

Bennett, Van Dam: Land issues a priority
St. George Spectrum; Oct. 26, 2004

Transportation advocates eye tax hikes
Salt Lake Tribune; Oct. 27, 2004

Tuesday, October 26, 2004

Utah Monuments, Initiative 1, Huntsman

Visitors up, spending down for Utah, Colorado monuments
High Country News; Oct. 26, 2004

Editorial: Vote no on Initiative 1
Deseret Morning News; Oct. 26, 2004

Editorial: Initiative 1 good for Utah
Provo Daily Herald; Oct. 26, 2004

Environmental group denounces Huntsman
Deseret Morning News; Oct. 26, 2004

Monday, October 25, 2004

Initiative 1, Nuclear Waste

Farmers, ranchers split on open-space measure
Salt Lake Tribune; Oct 23, 2004

Editorial: Initiative 1 aims to preserve clean air, water
Provo Daily Herald; Oct. 25, 2004

Opinion by Jim Hansen: Ill-conceived Initiative 1 wouldn't achieve goals
Deseret News; Oct. 24, 2004

Farm groups oppose Initiative 1
Deseret Morning News; Oct. 23, 2004

Utah congressmen push to end nuclear spending
Salt Lake Tribune; Oct. 25, 2004

N-plants being relicensed at record rates
Salt Lake Tribune; Oct 23, 2004

Swallow: My strong position against nuclear testing in Nevada
Salt Lake Tribune; Oct. 24, 2004

Matheson: Nuclear weapons research today means testing tomorrow
Salt Lake Tribune; Oct. 24, 2004

Editorial: Waste issue isn't resolved
Deseret News; Oct. 25, 2004

Public Lands, Bishop's BLM land deal

Utah congressional candidates divided over public lands
Salt Lake Tribune; Oct. 22, 2004

Department of Interior opens Utah wilderness for business
Los Angeles Times; Oct. 25, 2004
Free registration may be required

BLM opens Utah land for oil, gas drilling
Daily Herald (AP); Oct. 25, 2004

Bishop to propose legislation for open space in Deer Valley
Salt Lake Tribune; Oct. 25, 2004

Bishop to Move for BLM-Park City Land Deal
KSL; Oct. 25, 2004

Energy, Flouride, Open Space, Topnyms, Ellis Ivory

EPA designation puts wind in Moab's environmental sails
Salt Lake Tribune
October 24, 2004

Scientists speak out on fluoride
Deseret News
October 24, 2004

Experts give their take on fluoride
Standard-Examiner
Oct 23, 2004

Salt Lake creates open space trust fund
Deseret News
October 25, 2004

Editorial: How the West is named
Denver Post
October 21, 2004

Ivory's work background raises some eyebrows
Salt Lake Tribune
October 25, 2004

Friday, October 22, 2004

Land Exchange, Flouride

Major land exchange gets preliminary approval
Salt Lake Tribune, Oct. 22 2004

Fluoride fighters bring in backup
Ogden Standard Examiner, Oct. 22 2004

Thursday, October 21, 2004

BLM Roan Plateau Plan, Still Lake Powell

BLM: draft plan for drilling on Roan Plateau due out after election
Daily Herald, Oct. 20, 2004

Renaming Lake Powell turned down
Salt Lake Tribune, Oct. 21, 2004

Wednesday, October 20, 2004

Utah Benefits from Energy Royalties

West gains $1.1 billion in royalties
Denver Post, October 20, 2004

Utah along with Wyoming, New Mexico, and Colorado were big winners in a program that distributes income from energy and mining leases on federal property.

SL Open Space, N-Waste Prop. Tossed, Init. 1, More

Salt Lake City Council creates Open Space Lands Program
Salt Lake Tribune, Oct. 20, 2004

Panel tosses hotter-waste ban proposal
Salt Lake Tribune, Oct. 20, 2004

Related: No outright ban on nuclear waste
Deseret Morning News, Oct. 20, 2004

Related: Task force's waste report is insufficient, some say
Ogden Standard Examiner, Oct. 20, 2004

Related: Editorial: Waste task force doing its job well
Provo Daily Herald, Oct. 20, 2004

Sandy residents protest 'big boxes'
Deseret Morning News, Oct. 20, 2004

Growth planning gets recognition
Deseret Morning News, Oct. 20, 2004

Candidate targets rail line
Deseret Morning News, Oct. 20, 2004

Initiative 1: Yes
Salt Lake Tribune, Oct. 20, 2004

Envirocare N-Waste, Grouse Endangered?

Panel urges no hotter waste at Envirocare
Salt Lake Tribune, Oct. 19 2004

Legislators: Grouse listing won't fly
Salt Lake Tribune, Oct. 19 2004

More Input on Initiative 1

Initiative 1 comes with no guarantees
St. George Spectrum, Oct. 17, 2004

Tax panel cautions on pitfalls for Initiative 1
Salt Lake Tribune, Oct. 18, 2004

Vote “Yes” on Initiative One
KSL Editorial, Oct. 20, 2004

Voters alerted to tax concerns on Initiative 1
Salt Lake Tribune, Oct. 16, 2004

Initiative 1 comes with no guarantees
St. George Spectrum, Oct. 17, 2004

Tax panel cautions on pitfalls for Initiative 1
Salt Lake Tribune, Oct. 18, 2004

Vote “Yes” on Initiative One
KSL Editorial, Oct. 20, 2004

Voters alerted to tax concerns on Initiative 1
Salt Lake Tribune, Oct. 16, 2004

Politicians, groups debate Initiative 1
St. George Spectrum, Oct. 17, 2004

Test Site Expanding, Walkable Communities, N-Waste Landfill

Army expanding Utah testing site
Associated Press, Oct. 17, 2004

Walkable communities: Utahns taking to the sidewalks
Deseret News, Oct. 17, 2004

Proposed N-waste landfill gets a preliminary approval
Salt Lake Tribune, Oct. 17, 2004

Monday, October 18, 2004

Initiative 1 Backers Respond to Criticisms

The following was written by Utahns For Clean Water, Clean Air and Quality Growth.

Initiative 1 will not impact Utah’s AAA bond rating.
Initiative 1 will authorize the issuance of sales tax revenue bonds – not general obligation bonds. Because these bonds will be paid off using income from a specific revenue source – sales tax – Initiative 1 will not affect Utah’s bond rating.

In remarks made before the State of Utah Tax Review Commission on September 9, 2004, State Treasurer Ed Alter said, “The issuance of these bonds, on their own, will not adversely affect Utah’s AAA bond rating.”

At current valuations, Utah’s constitutional debt limit is approximately $2.7 billion. Total state indebtedness is approximately $1.7 billion. Additional debt of $150 million will scarcely put a dent in the +/- $1 billion available before we reach our constitutional cap.

Initiative 1 does not earmark “$30 million for convention centers.”
There is no provision in Initiative 1 which earmarks $30 million for convention centers.

Because quality growth needs are different in different communities, cities and counties may apply for $25 million in Community Project funding. In this category, eligible projects may either be conservation oriented (e.g., the protection of watersheds, farmland, open space etc.) or “additional quality of life and infrastructure projects”, including the construction of certain recreation and municipal facilities. There is nothing in the measure that says any specific portion of the $25 million has to be spent on facilities or infrastructure.

The Community Project concept was included to honor the quality growth needs of rural parts of the state. Because rural Utahns will be contributing sales tax to pay off Initiative 1 bonds, and have other quality growth needs besides open space, it is only fair that rural communities have an opportunity to benefit in appropriate ways.

To be eligible for funding, all Community Projects must be approved by: l.) The Associations of Governments, 2.) The Director of the Governor’s Office of Planning and Budget, and 3.) The Quality Growth Commission. In addition, they must be consistent with the Quality Growth Act of 1999.

Initiative 1 will not take away funding needed for schools, university buildings and highways.
Sales tax is not earmarked to pay for schools, university buildings or highways.

Because Initiative 1 will authorize a new, separate sales tax, it will not compete in any way with these other public purposes.

Sales tax is an appropriate funding vehicle to pay off Initiative 1 bonds.
All Utahns, from every walk of life, benefit from clean water, clean air and the preservation of our natural heritage. Sales tax is an equitable way for all Utahns to help make this investment.

Tourists also enjoy and benefit from our natural lands. Through a sales tax increase, tourists will pay their fair share to protect Utah’s wildlife and recreation lands.

Initiative 1 is a good investment.
Bonding to achieve public purposes now – by borrowing at 2% to 3% while land prices are rising at 8% to 10% – makes good financial sense.

If we wait too long to protect our natural heritage, critical lands will be lost to development and/or priced out of reach.

Interest payments over the life of the bonds may come to +/- $32 million, but this increase will be offset many times over by protecting Utah’s clean water and critical lands now when they are still affordable.

In the long run, Initiative 1 will save taxpayers millions.

Initiative 1 is affordable.
Initiative 1’s 1/20th of one percent sales tax increase will cost the average Utah family only $14 per year.

The tax increase proposed is temporary. It will terminate after the bonds are paid off – in approximately 10 to 13 years.

In annual bond payments, the State typically pays more than the entire bond amount authorized by Initiative 1.

Sales tax revenue bonds are constitutional, advantageous and commonly used.
Initiative 1 was written by Blake Wade, with Ballard Spahr, bond counsel for the State of Utah. It was reviewed by the Office of Legislative Research and General Counsel, the State Elections Office and the State Attorney General.

Nothing in the state constitution prohibits the issuance by the state of sales tax revenue bonds. In fact, this financing vehicle is already being used by many municipalities in Utah – and is common practice in other states.

Kent Mitchie, Sr. Vice President of Zions Bank has stated, “Though we have no formal position pro or con on Initiative 1, I do want to verify that sales tax revenue bonds are an innovative, well secured source of public finance. I would like to see these vehicles used more often to fund worthy public projects around our state.” Zions Bank is the chief underwriter for bonds issued by the State of Utah.

Initiative 1’s payment in-lieu of taxes provision makes sense.
Certain state agencies (such as the Division of Wildlife) are already required by law to make in-lieu of property tax payments to Counties where they own land (Utah Code 23-21-2).

This is a positive requirement which will prevent conservation projects from eroding the tax base of local communities. It will also incent project proponents to favor the use of conservation easements over the acquisition of land in fee.

Initiative 1 funds will be administered professionally and fairly by The Utah Quality Growth Commission.
The funds raised through Initiative 1 will be allocated, on a competitive application basis, by the Utah Quality Growth Commission – an entity created by the Legislature which has a solid, multi-year track record of awarding conservation grants and administering similar funds.

The Quality Growth Commission consists of 13 members appointed by the Governor, six of which must be elected officials. Two of these members must be individuals selected by farm organizations. (Ironically, the Farm Bureau currently has a seat on the Commission. Conservation interests do not.)

No new bureaucracy will be created. Initiative 1 endorses a proven, existing commission structure.

Initiative 1 has tough oversight provisions.
All Initiative 1 expenditures, as approved by the Quality Growth Commission and State Bonding Commission, will be subject to annual audits and Legislative review. An annual report to the Legislature is required and Legislative leaders and local elected officials will play key roles in endorsing and reviewing potential projects.

We don’t have “enough open space already”; nor will Initiative 1 “lock up” large tracts of private land.
Initiative 1 is not about wilderness or public lands, it’s about protecting key private lands with watershed, wildlife and agricultural values – the lands where we live.

Initiative 1 is also about much more than just land protection. HEALTH: it will help keep toxic chemicals and pollutants out of our water supply and provide incentives for clean water and clean air; COMMUNITY: it will help local communities build trails, parks and recreational facilities; PLANNING: it will provide local governments with planning funds to guide growth wisely; LAND MANAGEMENT: it will help landowners fight noxious weeds, enhance wildlife habitat, improve wetlands and address critical land management needs. Example: Initiative 1 funds could help keep the Sage Grouse off the Endangered Species List – an issue of vital importance to rural Utah.

Initiative 1 emphasizes quality, not quantity. To preserve just 5% of Utah’s irrigated farmland would cost $651 million. The $150 million provided by Initiative 1 will only be able to protect a small portion of the critical lands at stake. At the end of the day, the question will not be does this do and protect too much, but should we have done more?

The Quality Growth Commission administering Initiative 1 has adopted a “no net loss of private lands” policy to guard against the loss of private lands.

Existing programs are NOT enough. It is misleading to suggest “Various State and Federal programs have invested $1.5 billion in Utah open space, water quality and conservation over the last decade.”
The Farm Bureau's $1.5 billion claim factors in greenbelt property tax breaks for agriculture. This is a great program, but it does not protect open space or ag land permanently. Rather, farmers are given a tax break until they sell-out to development.

Federal programs do exist (e.g., CRP and WRP) but these are largely temporary lease programs – and again not permanent.

In recent years, conservation bonds have passed in Nevada ($200 million), Colorado ($170 million) and Arizona ($173 million) – while Utah's only state source for this purpose, the LeRay McAllister Fund, has been cut 74% by the Legislature to less than $800,000 today.

The Farmland Protection Program (FPP), part of the new Farm Bill, does have the potential to bring $3 to $4 million annually to Utah for conservation easements - but this program requires a 1:1 match. Initiative 1 funds will provide this match. Without it, FPP monies will go begging.

It is appropriate to provide funding for museums.
$5 million will be available to fund projects submitted by the State Museum of Natural History – this is just 3% of the total.

Museums of natural history contribute to the protection of Utah’s natural history in three ways: SCIENCE: Museum science programs and sensitive species inventories help set rational priorities for conservation and inform decision makers about natural resource use. COLLECTIONS: Museums have natural history collections which are valuable sources of information about Utah’s lands and waters. EDUCATION: Museums offer education programs which teach all Utahns about our unique natural heritage.

A statewide approach is best.
Utah's clean water, clean air and open space benefits all of us, so it seems only fair that all of us should invest in their preservation.

The natural world knows no political boundaries, so neither should our land and water protection efforts. Watersheds and wildlife, rivers and wetlands – to efficiently preserve many natural features, a regional approach is needed.

Numerous attempts to secure Legislative approval for local option sales taxes have failed. In Cache County, where this opportunity has existed, the County Commission has refused to place a local option on the ballot for years.

Summary
This is a great opportunity for Utah – it is the first time Utahns will have the opportunity to protect what makes Utah special – our mountain forests, canyon lands, our clean water to drink and clean air to breathe. Initiative 1 will provide the resources we need to adequately plan and prepare for the projected 1 million people we will add to Utah’s population in the next 15 to 20 years. Initiative 1 is an affordable way – $14 per year per family – to protect our quality of life now and pass Utah’s natural assets on to our children and grandchildren. All of this will be done through a citizen’s commission with tough fiscal audits and legislative oversight.

Friday, October 15, 2004

Salt Lake Great?, Nuclear Waste in Utah, More on Init. 1 and Taxes

Great Salt Lake approaches record low levels
Deseret News, Oct. 15, 2004

Goshutes' waste plan hits a snag
Salt Lake Tribune; Oct. 15, 2004

Walker and PFS official spar over nuclear waste plans
Deseret News, Oct. 15, 2004

Tax watchdog decries Initiative 1
Deseret News, Oct. 15, 2004

Thursday, October 14, 2004

Nuclear Waste Transportation; General Transportation; Coal

West states in dark on moving N-waste
Salt Lake Tribune, Oct. 14, 2004

Nuclear waste transit safe?
Deseret News, Oct. 14, 2004

Transportation open house coming soon
Daily Herald, Oct. 13, 2004

Toll roads, traffic fixes explored
Deseret News, Oct. 14, 2004

Utah commuters may soon see toll roads and reversible lanes
Standard Examiner, Oct. 14, 2004

Weber wants more local road projects
Standard Examiner, Oct. 14, 2004

Coal revenue slipping
Salt Lake Tribune, Oct. 14, 2004

Wednesday, October 13, 2004

Initiative 1 & Taxes, Candidates Talk So. Utah Transportation

Initiative 1 may prompt a tax warning
Deseret News, Oct. 13 2004

Candidates talk transportation
St. George Spectrum, Oct. 13 2004

Tuesday, October 12, 2004

Editorial on Initiative 1 by Jake Garn

Initiative 1 is investment in Utah
Deseret Morning News, Oct. 11 2004

Wilderness, Federal Land $, Growth, Nuclear Waste

Court orders release of wilderness deal data
Salt Lake Tribune, Oct. 12 2004

Similar: Wilds advocates win a round
Deseret Morning News, Oct. 12, 2004

Can federal lands equal Utah money?
Ogden Standard Examiner, Oct. 12 2004

Keeping up with growth is a struggle for state
Deseret Morning News, Oct. 12 2004

Rob Bishop engages new strategy in attempt to derail N-waste storage
Salt Lake Tribune, Oct. 12, 2004

Monday, October 11, 2004

Yesterday's News

N-waste protesters rally at Skull Valley
Salt Lake Tribune October 10, 2004

An environmental battleground
Salt Lake Tribune October 10, 2004

District 16 candidates focus on transportation, nuclear waste
Daily Herald October 10, 2004

State agency creates air quality action plan
Salt Lake Tribune October 9, 2004

A few older headlines I missed

Utah County looks at how to cope with explosive growth
Deseret News October 1, 2004

Big-box stores becoming big empty boxes
Deseret News October 1, 2004

Land irreplaceable, initiative backer says
Davis County Clipper October 2, 2004

County among many hoping for ‘Quality Growth’
Tooele Transcript Bulletin October 2, 2004

Spruced-up ramps can rev up revenue
Deseret Morning News October 3, 2004

Tax hikes sought for road projects
Deseret Morning News October 3, 2004

Land exchange would limit access to Desolation Canyon
Salt Lake Tribune October 4, 2004

Tooele County Commission rivals differ on growth, prison
Salt Lake Tribune October 4, 2004

Today's Headlines

Land-use initiative is still up for grabs
Salt Lake Tribune

Most Utahns don't yet know how they will vote on the open-space initiative

Utahn fighting U.S. over land liability
Deseret Morning News

A Utah land owner is trying to get compensated for land taken by the federal government

Subdivision demands ordinance revision
Provo Daily Herald



Friday, October 08, 2004

Utah's nuclear waste ploy fails

Utah's nuclear waste ploy fails
Deseret News

A behind-the-scenes attempt by the Utah delegation to attach wilderness language to the Defense Reauthorization Act — which could have blocked the temporary storage of high-level nuclear waste in Utah and helped protect Hill Air Force Base — has fallen short.

Walker Opposes Open Space Initiative

Walker opposes open-space initiative
Salt Lake Tribune (Thanks to Pete)

"Grave concerns": She says the measure could threaten Utah's bond rating and that the revenue would also fund other projects

Walker urges defeat of Initiative 1
Provo Daily Herald

Governor Olene Walker expressed her opposition to the open-space initiative on the November ballot, reasoning that the measure contains too many pork barrel projects. She noted that $30 million of the $150 million initiative is earmarked for convention centers, fair grounds and local government buildings and the like. She said she supports the concept of preserving open space, but can not support this measure.

Governor opposes Initiative 1
Ogden Standard Examiner

Conservation bond causes Walker concern

Thursday, October 07, 2004

New Draper-Highland Connector Road Opens

New connector road opens
Daily Herald
Sep 30, 2004

Instead of going around Traverse Mountain, a new road now allows motorists to go over it, connecting Utah and Salt Lake counties by a thoroughfare other than Interstate 15.

Related:
'Draper' voters are in no-man's land

Lake Powell

Lake Powell numbers add up to grim
Farmington New Mexico; Oct. 7

The amount of water flowing into Lake Powell was less in 2002 than in any other year since the dam was finished, the reservoir now contains about 9 million acre-feet of water and next year's plan is to release 8.3 million.

Monday, October 04, 2004

Oil and Gas and Rivers

Greens: Drilling threatens Utah rivers more than mining
Salt Lake Tribune; Oct. 1

Three days before Interior Secretary Gale Norton signed an order prohibiting hard-rock mining along three rivers in southeastern Utah, the BLM auctioned off oil and gas leases on roughly 5,000 acres along the river.