Jason, you seem t have back off that assertion a little bit from the last time. However, you can bet my previous post was directed right at you. Here's some facts for a factual guy like you. It is federal law man. Uncontested.
Under managed FLMPA lands, no plans or revisions can be sent to Congress while under arbitration. Arbitration is a granted right every citizen in this country posses to ensure multiple use management on public lands. Governing policies under the FLMPA also ensures that best use practices on any piece of land, get's first consideration during planning and revision. The plan gets republished for comments and, if no one contests the plan, it goes to congress to get voted in. If someone contest the plan, it is drafted again and republished for comments. This is done and if it persists, courts will come into lay. Once arbitration is cleared up, a final draft is sent o congress for voting into law. That's the FLMPA in action and, there is a huge difference between this and designated land.
Once a NM area is designated, There are no laws that grant we the people arbitration if we disagree with the Monument plan. Under designation, we don't have that legal right like we do on non-designated land. The plan that gets sent to congress, post designation is what we got. Congress can change it or leave it alone. But, we have no legal granted arbitration to contest the plan put in front of congress to vote into law. And, while it is common for you to say public input will be considered for every monument plan, it just isn't always true. Multiple, multiple examples of hunting opportunity lost on monuments, millions of acre's of hunting ground lost after monument designation. Even when the BLM and USFS was the managers of those lands. That's not taking public input and, practicing multiple use management. That's the effect of a statutory monument plan, lobbied by special interest, and used to jerk our rights out from under us.
So, you are right. Consideration is all we get on both designated and non-designated land. But, only on non-designated land do we have legal means to ensure we get that consideration, if we have a practical use for the area in the plan. And, legal means to contest any plan. And, legal means to ensure multiple use management practices outlined in the FLMPA are adhered too. But, you did say earlier in this thread Multiple use management was mandatory on USFS and BLM monuments. Which real life results and examples say different.
To everyone else. I'm not trying to be the authority. I'm just trying to ensure you get the full story and the facts here. I'm not a pro monument guy the way they are being used by our enemies and, they way they are being abused to include way to large an area. I'm not against them if they follow the guidelines outlining their original intent. I'm just not going to stand here and let someone blow smoke about them. In many cases, they simply are not worth the risk to push for them.