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The Fight for Dispersed Camping Near Moab Continues

Why you should submit here, even if you already have elsewhere!

We keep them honest. If everyone only comments through the government/agency site, we have to take their word on how many comments were received. By submitting through BRC, we create an independent record of our community’s response that can’t be buried or under-reported.

We protect your voice. If this fight ends up in court, having our own record of submitted comments means we don’t have to wait a year or more for a government agency to turn over documents. We can move quickly with proof that thousands of you spoke up.
We keep you in the loop. When you comment through our site, we can send you updates on what comes next. If you only use the government/agency site, you’re depending on them to tell you what happens next — and they won’t.

Double coverage matters. Even if you’ve already commented through the government/agency site, submitting through ours makes your voice count twice — once in their system, and once in ours. That way they know the OHV community is watching and tracking every move.

For years, BRC has been trusted to run action alerts like this. Thousands of members and supporters have used this system effectively to defend access to public lands. This isn’t about collecting your info — it’s about building the strongest, most transparent record possible to hold agencies accountable.

Why you should submit here, even if you already have elsewhere!

We keep them honest. If everyone only comments through the government/agency site, we have to take their word on how many comments were received. By submitting through BRC, we create an independent record of our community’s response that can’t be buried or under-reported.

We protect your voice. If this fight ends up in court, having our own record of submitted comments means we don’t have to wait a year or more for a government agency to turn over documents. We can move quickly with proof that thousands of you spoke up.

We keep you in the loop. When you comment through our site, we can send you updates on what comes next. If you only use the government/agency site, you’re depending on them to tell you what happens next — and they won’t.

Double coverage matters. Even if you’ve already commented through the government/agency site, submitting through ours makes your voice count twice — once in their system, and once in ours. That way they know the OHV community is watching and tracking every move.

For years, BRC has been trusted to run action alerts like this. Thousands of members and supporters have used this system effectively to defend access to public lands. This isn’t about collecting your info — it’s about building the strongest, most transparent record possible to hold agencies accountable.

March 25, 2023

In 2022 the BLM released a draft environmental assessment for dispersed camping around Moab, Utah in several special recreation management areas. The BLM just opened up a second round of comments on the draft plan for dispersed camping in the Labyrinth Rims/Gemini Bridges SRMA to address concerns raised in the first round of comment. The BLM has released the EA to provide additional information that was requested during the first comment period. BlueRibbon was adamant that the data being used by available to the public regarding wildfire, user conflicts, dispersed campsites and more be available to the public to provide public comment. Although, all the information we requested was not given in this EA we do appreciate the next round of comments to address the additional information.

356 dispersed campsites were identified within the 120,000 acre area that sits between Arches National Park and Canyonlands National Park. You can see where the identified campsites are in the map below.

We are also making the shape files with the GPS coordinates of the sites available to members of the Dispersed Camping Access Alliance:

This is one of the most popular areas in the nation for dispersed camping. If the BLM designates all current inventoried dispersed campsites at 356, which is highly unlikely, that still is restricting use into a box rather than managing impacts. This plan is ultimately punishing users who have practiced leave no trace principles and have not left any indication of their campsites. It is feasible that within hundreds of thousands of acres, users can have the camping experience they desire whether that be a remote dispersed campsite or a developed campground. Pets would be required to be on leashes even at the dispersed campsites, fire pans, portable toilets and the restriction of wood gathering are still part of the EA as they were in the first released EA.

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