Noel tells Republican women thoughts on Lake Powell Pipeline, monument designations

In this file photo, District 73 Rep. Mike Noel, R-Kanab, speaks to the Washington County Republican Women at a luncheon, St. George, Utah, Jan. 5, 2016 | Photo by Julie Applegate, St. George News

ST. GEORGE – At a luncheon held by the Washington County Republican Women Thursday, District 73 Rep. Mike Noel, R-Kanab, spoke against national monument designations and in favor of the proposed Lake Powell Pipeline, which he said will allow Southern Utah to grow to potentially the size of the Wasatch Front. Noel also discussed his bid to head up the Bureau of Land Management.


Read more: Conservative Utah legislator ready to apply for BLM director


Noel has served in the Utah House of Representatives since 2003, representing a large swath of Southern and southeastern Utah. District 73 encompasses several counties, including all or part of Garfield, Kane, San Juan, Wayne, Beaver, Iron and Piute counties.

Noel spoke strongly in favor of the Lake Powell Pipeline, saying it is needed if Southern Utah is going to grow.

Noel helped found the Kane County Water Conservancy District, which now has 3,000 water connections and $166 million in infrastructure, he said.

“I’m a member of the Lake Powell Pipeline Management Committee,” he said. “And I will just testify to you today that we’ve got to have that Lake Powell Pipeline in Washington County if we want to continue to grow. And I think you want to continue to grow here.”

Newcomers tend to think growth should stop after they move to the area, Noel said; however, water planners need to think 20 years ahead. Water from the proposed pipeline will be needed by current residents’ grandchildren and great-grandchildren, he said.

Maybe we’ll reach the vision of Brigham Young, and it’ll be like the Wasatch Front down here,” Noel said. “But that’s kind of my vision, too.”

Noel spoke at length against national monument designations, which he says prevent economic development and take away jobs.

Before the November 2016 election, President Barrack Obama designated 24 national monuments and enlarged three existing monuments, reserving more than 548 million acres of land, Noel said, much of it in the outer continental shelf.

Monument designation adds an additional and unnecessary layer of bureaucracy, he said.

“So, essentially you can’t do anything.”

Noel used the example of his previous experience as the project manager for the proposed Smoky Hollow coal mine on the Kaiparowits Plateau, which is now within the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument.

The project would have developed the largest untapped coal reserve in the United States, he said, and could have been accomplished with only 30 acres of surface disturbance.

“Low-sulphur, high-Btu (British thermal unit) coal, highly valued coal, coal that was called ‘compliance coal,'” he said. “It was the cleanest coal you could get.”

After the project was shut down, Noel said, an Indonesian firm that was a big donor to the Clinton Foundation started bringing in compliance coal from southeast Asia.

The Federal Land Policy and Management Act and the National Environmental Policy Act were designed to help land managers make better decisions, he said, but that purpose has been convoluted by environmental groups that use the acts to delay the process and file lawsuits.

Noel continued to say that similarly, the Equal Access to Justice Act, which authorizes the payment of attorney’s fees to a prevailing party in an action against the United States, has allowed environmental groups to sue federal land managers and then settle, leaving locals out of the discussion.

“And you’re left out in the cold.”

If Noel is selected as the head of the BLM, he said he will do everything he can to get rid of the Equal Access to Justice Act.

The Antiquities Act was appropriate for 1906 when looting of archaeological sites was more common and people were less educated, Noel said, but the law is no longer needed. He said:

We’ve got all that information now. We can do what we need to do. We can be better managers of the public lands. We can make sure the land is multiple-use but yet people can enjoy the pristine nature of the public land.

States should be sovereign, he said, and sometimes the federal government forgets that it was the states that created it and it takes too much power.

“We are the ones that are supposed to be in charge of this environment, of this area here,” Noel said. “We can do the things right if we use local people, if we go by our core values.”

It would be wrong to give up farming, ranching and fruit production for tourism, he said, but it is possible to do both.

Noel wants to revoke or modify Obama’s Bears Ears monument designation, as soon as possible after President-elect Donald Trump takes office.

Noel said his bid to head the BLM is coming together. He has the support of 800 sheriffs in 11 Western states. Noel received endorsements from the Utah Cattlemen’s Association, the Utah Farm Bureau, the Utah Rural Electic Association.

Lesa Sandberg, president of the Washington County Republican Women, told St. George News that their organization also believes Noel will be a good fit for the new BLM director.

“The Washington County Republican Women love Mike Noel,” Sandberg said. “We fully endorse him and hope that President Trump will chose him as the BLM director. We feel that he has all the experience and knowledge needed to take care of public lands. And we were just grateful that he came to our group and shared his insights with us.”

Sen. Orrin Hatch will present Noel’s application to president-elect Trump, Noel said.

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Twitter: @STGnews

Copyright St. George News, SaintGeorgeUtah.com LLC, 2017, all rights reserved.

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16 Comments

  • Real Life January 6, 2017 at 11:30 am

    Greed.

    • .... January 6, 2017 at 2:38 pm

      11: 30 AM ? you should be trying to get a job

      • Real Life January 7, 2017 at 6:12 am

        Hey look who’s back! Super internet troll! Slow week for “volunteers”?

        • comments January 7, 2017 at 5:11 pm

          I’m still waiting for that big list of all his “volunteering”

  • Bender January 6, 2017 at 11:41 am

    Noel is a bloviating, partisan, demagogue hack. A perfect fit for the Trump administration.

  • comments January 6, 2017 at 1:55 pm

    Well he wants the area to look like the wasatch front. I guess with all the traffic and foul air and crime that comes with it. The filth polluted air up there is not something to aspire to. “Economic development” is code word in political speak for personal enrichment and greed. I know if this area grew to 500,000 i would not want to live here. Not sure I would if it doubled in size.

  • hiker75 January 6, 2017 at 2:04 pm

    Who wants wall to wall people in southern Utah? Not me.

    • Real Life January 7, 2017 at 6:14 am

      Ok then “hiker”.

  • Chris January 6, 2017 at 5:19 pm

    “the federal government forgets that it was the states that created it” Well, Mike, that is true of the first thirteen states, but subsequently, every other state was created by the federal government. Mike Noel is perfect example of Utah politicians–dumb as a rock.

  • Mike January 6, 2017 at 6:56 pm

    I think hes not qualified for the position and who wants St.George to be like the Wasatch Front with the smog and crime no thanks at some point it has to stop

  • commonsense January 6, 2017 at 11:52 pm

    Thanks Mike for articulating the feelings of most people who are effected by Federal seizure and control of Utah lands. The Obama decision to designate Bears Ears was purely political punishment. Utah is so we’ll governed, no debt, healthy business climate, low crime, low poverty.
    If only the Federal government could be so well managed.

    • comments January 7, 2017 at 5:18 pm

      Total BS. UT has plenty of problems and the large cities have crime comparable to similar sized ones in other states. High suicide rate, domestic abuse, homelessness, air pollution, poverty, the list goes on

  • Ross.ribeiro January 7, 2017 at 12:35 am

    “Growth for the sake of growth is the ideology of the cancer cell.” -Ed Abbey

  • dhamilton2002 January 7, 2017 at 6:04 am

    So I was wondering if Noel spoke directly with B Young about his vision for this area? Or maybe Noel had a revelation with guidance from the mining and coal mining industries who wanted to be able to develop Bears Ears. His vision to grow southern Utah to the size of the over-crowded and seriously polluted Wasatch Front doesn’t match the desires of anyone other than the local land developers. He’s just another “drill baby drill” guy!

  • Not_So_Much January 7, 2017 at 9:20 am

    One or most likely two billion dollars to enable hundreds of thousands to live here assuming there will be enough water to draw on? He is part of the problem and you have to wonder why.

    • comments January 7, 2017 at 2:56 pm

      its just greed. what’s to wonder?

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