Sagebrush Sedition. Warren J. Stucki
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SAGEBRUSH
SEDITION
A Novel by
WARREN STUCKI
© 2008 by Warren Stucki. All Rights Reserved.
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Book design | Vicki Ahl
Cover design | Elizabeth Stucki Body type | Franklin Gothic Book Display type | Melbourne Printed on acid free paperLibrary of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Stucki, Warren J., 1946-
Sagebrush sedition / by Warren Stucki.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-0-86534-631-4 (softcover : alk. paper)
1. Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument (Utah)--Fiction. I. Title.
PS3619.T84S24 2008
813’.6--dc22
2008017614
WWW.SUNSTONEPRESS.COM SUNSTONE PRESS / POST OFFICE BOX 2321 / SANTA FE, NM 87504-2321 /USA (505) 988-4418 / ORDERS ONLY (800) 243-5644 / FAX (505) 988-1025
This book is dedicated to the Grand Staircase/ Escalante National Monument itself and all the people involved in its creation, both for and against. It is an immense, a wild and an amazing place.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
QUINN GRIFFIN
for his time and help in understanding the rancher’s point of view.
MONUMENT MANAGER DAVID HUNSAKER
for his time and help in understanding the Bureau of Land Management’s point of view.
SHERIFF LAMONT SMITH
for his help in understanding the county’s point of view and showing me the lay to the land.
LINDA STUCKI
my wife, who as usual was tireless in going through the book several times, ferreting out story flaws, grammar, spelling and punctuation.
LIZ STUCKI
my niece, for her time and talent in creating the book cover and the monument map.
PROLOGUE
Outside El Tovar Lodge, Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona
September 18, 1996
12:10 P.M. Mountain Standard Time
THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES:
Thank you very much, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for being here and for being in such good spirits. Thank you, God, for letting the sun come out. This is a sunny day - we ought to have a sunny day for a sunny day.
Thank you, Rob Arnberger, for the work you do here at Grand Canyon National Park and for your participation; to all of our distinguished guests. I want to say a special word of thanks to my good friend, Governor Roy Romer from Colorado. And then you, Secretary Bruce Babbitt, for your long, consistent, devoted efforts on behalf of America’s natural heritage. (Applause.)
I also want to thank the Harvey High School Choir and the students and the faculty from the Grand Canyon Unified School who are here. (Applause.) Where are you all? Thank you. (Applause.) I think this ought to qualify as an excused absence. (Laughter.) Or maybe even a field trip.
I want to thank all of our tribal leaders who are here and, indeed, all of the Native Americans who are here. We are following in your footsteps and honoring your ethic today. (Applause.)
I want to say a special word of thanks to my longtime friend, Norma Matheson. Norma and her late husband, Scott, became great friends of Hillary’s and mine when we served together as governors. After Scott passed away, Norma honored me by asking me to come to Utah to speak at a dinner in his honor for a foundation set up in his memory. I never was with Scott Matheson, I never even talked to him on the phone that I did not feel I was in the presence of a great man. Both of them are truly wonderful human beings. And I am grateful for her presence here today and for her commitment. (Applause.)
And finally, I want to thank—more strongly than I can ever convey to you—the Vice President for his passion, his commitment, his vision, and his sheer knowledge of environmental and natural heritage issues. It has become a treasure for the United States and I have mined it frequently for four years. (Applause.)
I remember when I was trying to decide what sort of person I wanted to ask to run with me for Vice President and I made up my mind I wanted somebody who was smarter than I was—that left a large field to pick from— (Laughter)—someone who was philosophically in tune with me, someone who would work like crazy, and someone who knew things I didn’t know. And I read Earth in the Balance, and I realized it was a profoundly important book by someone who knew things I wanted to learn. And we have learned a lot and done a lot together over the last four years. Very few things we have done will have a more positive, lasting effect than this, and it will always have Al Gore’s signature as well. And I thank him for what he has done. (Applause.)
Ladies and gentlemen, the first time I ever came to the Grand Canyon was also in nineteen seventy-one in the summer. And one of the happiest memories of my entire life was when, for some fluky reason, even in the summertime, I found a place on a rock overlooking the Grand Canyon where I was all alone. And for two hours I sat and I lay down on that rock and I watched the sunset. And I watched the colors change layer after layer after layer for two hours. I could have sat there for two days if the sun had just taken a little longer to set. (Laughter.)
And even today, twenty-five years later, in hectic, crazy times, in lonely, painful times, my mind drifts back to those two hours that I was alone on that rock watching the sunset over this Canyon. And it will be with me till the day I die. I want more of those sights to be with all Americans for all time to come. (Applause.)
As all of you know, today we are keeping the faith with the future. I’m about to sign a proclamation that will establish the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. (Applause.) Why are we doing this? Well, if you look at the Grand Canyon behind me, it seems impossible to think that anyone would want to touch it. But in the past there have been those who wanted to build on the Canyon, to blast it, to dam it. Fortunately, these plans were stopped by far-sighted Americans who saw that the Grand Canyon was a national treasure, a gift from God that could not be improved upon.
The fact that we stand here is due, in large part, to the Antiquities Act of nineteen-o-six. The law gives the President the authority to protect federal lands of extraordinary cultural, historic and scientific value, and in nineteen-o-eight that’s just what Theodore Roosevelt did when he protected the Grand Canyon.
Since