This area of Soldier’s Pass is managed by the BLM’s Cedar City Field Office in southwestern Utah
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This area of Soldier’s Pass is managed by the BLM’s Cedar City Field Office in southwestern Utah
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Southern Utah is known for big-name public lands, including Zion National Park, but few people outside the state are familiar with the remote area west of Cedar City, where mountain ranges and desert lowlands offer world-class hiking, wildlife viewing, mountain biking, backpacking and more—providing a big economic lift to the region.
The Bureau of Land Management’s (BLM) Cedar City Field Office oversees some 2.1 million acres of public land, including mountains that rise to over 9,000 feet, sagebrush and grassland, desert plains, cool aspen groves, critical wildlife habitat, and 2,500-year-old trees.
These public lands generate significant revenue for communities in southern Utah. In a 2017 ECONorthwest report commissioned by The Pew Charitable Trusts, researchers found that visitors participating in “quiet recreation” such as hunting, camping, hiking, and mountain biking within the Cedar City Field Office planning area generate $12.3 million in total economic output annually, including $17.4 million in direct spending on those activities within 50 miles of recreation sites, and support more than 200 local jobs.
The BLM is updating its management plan for the area and, in light of the natural and recreational value of the lands, Pew is working with local partners to ensure that the final plan strikes a commonsense balance among conservation, recreation, and development.
Pew encourages the BLM’s Cedar City Field Office to continue to work with all stakeholders to develop a final management plan that addresses multiple uses of these special public lands and ensures their conservation for current and future generations.
Ken Rait directs The Pew Charitable Trusts’ western lands initiative.