Gate Canyon Road “Improvement”

The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) is considering a  proposal by Duchesne County to construct a Hydrocarbon Highway through Gate Canyon,  connecting the Uinta Basin to Nine Mile Canyon. The intent of the project is to facilitate  trucking of Uinta waxy crude oil and expand oil production in the Basin. The project would  obliterate Gate Canyon, removing its meanders and filling the canyon with over 180 feet of dirt.  Once completed it is anticipated there will be one oil tanker every three minutes through Nine  Nile Canyon. 

Nine Mile Canyon is world-renowned for its remarkable density and diversity of prehistoric sites  and artifacts—including petroglyphs, pictographs, and granaries. The canyon is significant to  several Native American tribes and is a Traditional Cultural Property. The canyon also contains  important historic sites, including evidence of the post-Civil War era Buffalo Soldiers and early  settlers. Importantly these treasures can be seen in relationship with the natural landscape. Many of the historic inscriptions in Gate Canyon would be destroyed by the project. 

“The idea that the anyone would allow this type of development inside Carbon County’s most  important tourism resource is an affront to those of us working so hard to bring visitors and  attention to our world-famous attractions,” said Layne Miller, Price City Council member and  tour guide in the canyon. “To put it bluntly, tourists and oil tankers don’t mix.” Mr. Miller,  who has guided tours in Nine Mile Canyon for over 20 years, has seen firsthand the need to  protect the canyon’s irreplaceable cultural resources. “Our tours attract people from across the  nation and world. I have conducted rock art tours where we had more people from Manhattan  than from Carbon County. It’s truly a worldwide draw.” 

Even the BLM recognizes that Nine Mile Canyon contains an abundance of artifacts including  more than 10,000 images etched onto its walls making it “the world’s longest art gallery” and an  “outdoor museum”. It is believed “to contain the country’s highest concentration of rock art  panels, remnants of the prehistoric Archaic, Fremont, and Ute cultures”. The entire canyon is  eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places due to its vast cultural and historic  resources. BLM designated the route through Nine Mile and Gate Canyons as a Scenic  Backcountry Byway in 1991 and declared Nine Mile Canyon an Area of Critical Environmental  Concern in 2008. Nonetheless, the current proposal puts all of these irreplaceable cultural  resources at risk.  

J. Michael Hansen, Chair of the Nine Mile Canyon Coalition, an organization formed 30  years ago to protect the natural and cultural resources of Nine Mile Canyon, stated that “no  single project would do more to destroy our cultural heritage in the State of Utah than the approval of this ‘Hydrocarbon Highway.’ It is the equivalent of putting oil tanker traffic through  the middle of Temple Square or the Louvre.” 

Kent Williams, President of the Utah Rock Art Research Association, had this to say: “A  high volume of semi-truck traffic down Nine Mile Canyon would threaten the incredible array of  rock art in the canyon and impact the experience of people who come from across the country to  experience and enjoy it.” 

Mr. Williams added: “Dramatically increasing semi-truck traffic would likely require  modification of the existing roadway in Nine Mile Canyon and construction activities could  impact the many rock art panels that are located very near the road, all along the canyon. That  same proximity of rock art to the road allows the opportunity for people to appreciate and enjoy  the images in a relatively natural setting. A steady stream of semi-trucks with noise and diesel  exhaust would degrade that experience. Nine Mile Canyon is a one-of-a-kind outdoor museum  with world class rock art. Surely there is a better alternative for a hydrocarbon highway.”

Join us in telling the Utah State Legislature, the Seven County Infrastructure Coalition, and the Bureau of Land Management that we do not want a Hydrocarbon Highway through Gate Canyon and Nine Mile Canyon.
— Nine Mile Canyon Coalition
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Our Comments for the BLM’s Gate Canyon Project

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RadioACTive: The Hydrocarbon Highway