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Live updates: 5:05 p.m. An Eagle County Regional Airport employee confirmed that Biden had taken off in Air Force One on his trip to Los Angeles.
3:58 p.m. An Eagle County Regional Airport employee confirmed that Biden had not yet arrived for his flight out of Colorado.
3:46 p.m. Biden was scheduled to fly out of Colorado on his way to Los Angeles by 3:35 p.m., the Denver Post is awaiting confirmation of his departure.
3:32 p.m. Biden’s motorcade has left Camp Hale and is returning to the Eagle County Regional Airport to depart.
1:48 p.m. Just as quickly as President Joe Biden took the microphone to speak, he pulled Sen. Michael Bennet — who is running against Republican Joe O’Dea to keep his seat — up to the lectern again, noting that the senator was the driving force behind his decision to sign the new national monument designation.
“He came up to the White House and said “I told you what I need’ and I said ‘I’ll do it,’” Biden said. “And you know why? I was worried he’d never leave the damn White House.”
The pair chuckled and shook hands before Biden went on to praise the country’s national monuments.
“They unite us,” he said. “These treasured lands tell the story of America.”
Audio and video reception for the live feed of Biden’s address at the mountainous Camp Hale is poor, disrupting coverage of the president’s speech.
1:37 p.m. Sen. Michael Bennet recalled the history of Camp Hale, training 10th Mountain Division troopers for combat in World War II, one of them recently recalled to him that conditions were so tough some called the site “Camp Hell.”
What about the mountain sitting behind Bennet, Biden and other prominent Democrats?
The veteran said it was “the coldest son of a bitch he ever climbed,” Bennet recalled.
“Mr. President, welcome to Camp Hale,” Bennet said. “You have excellent taste… for your administration’s first national monument designation.”
1:21 p.m. Gov. Jared Polis welcomed President Joe Biden a second time Wednesday at Camp Hale where he celebrated the president’s decision to designate the newest national monument.
“Today, Mr. President, you’re gonna get ‘er done,” Polis said.
The site represents Colorado’s contributions to the country’s World War II effort and the ski troopers trained there, Polis said. Once they returned, many 10th Mountain Division veterans came to Colorado to found ski resorts like those in Aspen, Keystone and Vail.
Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack followed Polis in praising the decision, which would temporarily block new mining and drilling operations.
“This is a pause, pending public input,” Vilsack said, and it does not impact existing leases.
Vilsack compared Biden’s record of protecting public lands to that of former President Teddy Roosevelt.
Rep. Joe Neguse followed Vilsack, calling Biden’s decision historic. When the crowd applauded his remarks, Neguse urged them to go louder.
“Eagle County, you can do better than that,” Neguse said with a smile.
12:44 p.m. While left-leaning nonprofits, organizations and politicians celebrated Biden’s presence in Colorado Wednesday — and his decision to create a new, massive national monument — conservatives took the opposite approach.
“Rather than working on real issues like reducing inflation and improving the economy, Joe Biden came to Colorado today to unilaterally lock up hundreds of thousands of acres through a stroke of his pen and prevent Coloradans from using our public lands for activities that we want and need,” U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert said in a release.
Boebert called the move a “land grab” meant to shut down American energy and natural resource production. Others echoed her sentiment.
Joe O’Dea, who is challenging incumbent U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet for his seat, called his opponent’s presence at Biden’s side a “photo-op political stunt.”
O’Dea called Camp Hale an amazing place but criticized Biden and Bennet’s records on inflation, border security and crime.
Colorado Republican Party Chair Kristi Burton Brown called Biden’s visit an “election year stunt” to bolster Bennet’s campaign.
12:31 p.m. Biden’s declaration Wednesday morning of the 54,000-acre Camp Hale-Continental Divide National Monument in Colorado drew a flurry of praise from political, social and conservation groups.
The League of Conservation Voters used the announcement as a reason to launch a new ad buy for incumbent Sen. Michael Bennet and against his challenger, Joe O’Dea. The group praised the senator for his work protecting Camp Hale and in favor of the CORE Act.
In short, the League said in a release “If O’Dea wins, Colorado loses.”
Other organizations lauding Biden’s decision include the Center for Western Priorities, the Access Fund, Hunters of Color, the Hispanic Access Foundation and the National Coalition of Black Veterans. A spat of elected officials in Colorado also announced their support including commissioners from Eagle, Pitkin and Summit counties (and Clark County Nevada) and the mayors of Avon, Breckenridge, Frisco and Vail.
“Establishing these areas as a National Monument will bring great benefits to our Western mountain communities and is an important step towards providing our Western communities with a bright future while honoring the past,” Summit County Commissioner Elisabeth Lawrence said in a release.
11:55 a.m. After speaking with the governor and other prominent Democrats for a few minutes, presidential staffers ushered Biden into a black Chevy Suburban, part of the motorcade that will bring him southeast to Camp Hale, approximately 45 miles away.
11:54 a.m. Within minutes of landing, Biden threw his arm around Gov. Jared Polis’ shoulder and shared a few laughs with the governor, Sens. Michael Bennet and John Hickenlooper, Rep. Joe Neguse and Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack.
The engines of Air Force One idled in the background, muffling much of their conversation. But as Biden thrust on his trademark black aviator sunglasses, Polis thanked him for the designation and visit.
“Happy to do it,” Biden replied.
11:37 a.m. President Joe Biden landed at the Eagle County Regional Airport in Gypsum ahead of his visit to Camp Hale, which he designated Wednesday morning as part of a 54,000-acre national monument.
Gov. Jared Polis, Sens. Michael Bennet and John Hickenlooper, Rep. Joe Neguse and Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack awaited the president on the tarmac.
This is an ongoing story and will be updated frequently. Below is our original story.
President Joe Biden is arriving in Colorado today for the first time since he surveyed the damage from the Marshall Fire in January — and thankfully, it will be under much less somber (though not universally beloved) circumstances.
The president invoked the Antiquities Act Wednesday morning to designate nearly 54,000 acres of high country near Leadville and Vail as the Camp Hale-Continental Divide National Monument. The designation aims to protect and preserve the training ground for the legendary 10th Mountain Division in World War II. Those troops both helped turn the tide of the war and returned to launch Colorado’s ski industry.
The designation, which includes the Tenmile Range, also cites the area’s significance to the Ute Tribes. The U.S. government forced those people to relinquish the area and much of their ancestral homeland in the mid-1800s, according to the White House. It still houses burial sites thousands of years old and remains culturally and spiritually significant to the people.
The White House also cites the area’s ecological diversity and natural habitat in the designation.
The designation will protect existing uses for the area while prohibiting new development there. It will be the first completely new national monument designated by Biden. The U.S. Forest Service will manage the new national monument. It will be tasked with developing resources to educate visitors on the area’s significance and history of the Ute people and the 10th Mountain Division.
“This is great news for Coloradans and military veterans, who called on President Biden to protect this important historical site and the landscape surrounding it,” Center for Western Priorities Executive Director Jennifer Rokala said in a statement after reports of the president’s plan published. “It’s a welcome sign that the president is listening to Westerners who want to see public lands and landmarks protected for future generations.”
In addition to the national monument designation, Biden will also announce a two-year prohibition on new mining and federal mineral leases on nearly 225,000 acres in the Thompson Divide area. The area has been closed to oil and gas leasing for several years, according to the White House. Pre-existing leases will not be affected. The prohibition will be the start of a Bureau of Land Management and Forest Service-led process looking at a 20-year prohibition in the area.
In a statement ahead of Biden’s arrival, Bennet said he could think of “no better choice” for Biden’s first national monument than Camp Hale-Continental Divide. He touted the Thompson Divide protections as having broad support from Coloradans and local leaders.
“With every passing year, there are fewer World War II veterans who trained at Camp Hale left to tell their story, which is why it is so important that we protect this site now,” Bennet said. “… I am grateful to President Biden for answering Colorado’s call to honor our veterans, safeguard our wildlife and public lands, and strengthen our outdoor recreation economy.”
The declarations follow years of efforts by Democrats to pass the Colorado Outdoor Recreation & Economy Act, or CORE Act. The bill has been championed by U.S. Sens. Michael Bennet and John Hickenlooper and U.S. Rep. Joe Neguse.
The CORE Act has passed the U.S. House of Representatives multiple times but hasn’t garnered the necessary Republican support in the deadlocked Senate to move forward in that chamber. The CORE Act is a combination of four bills to add protections to more than 400,000 acres of public land in Colorado. Biden’s declarations don’t encompass the entire scope of the legislation, though the Thompson Divide and national monument designations were both key parts of it.
Not all Coloradans are on board. The state’s Republican Congressional delegation, along with other GOP members, released a letter in September condemning the effort as imposing “severe land-use restrictions on the people of Colorado and across the American West.”
Biden’s planned designation comes about two months after Bennet convened a roundtable of supporters to meet with Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack to urge action on the site. Vilsack promised to take their message back to Biden. The dwindling number of World War II veterans put a special emphasis on it, Vilsack said then.
The designation also comes as Bennet is locked in a re-election fight with Denver businessman Joe O’Dea, and just days before ballots for that election start hitting Coloradans’ mailboxes. After news broke of the president’s planned designation, O’Dea panned it as an election year stunt, though he called Camp Hale an “amazing place.”
“Biden and Bennet are moving the country badly in the wrong direction, and no amount of photo-ops in a place we all love will change this fact: accountability from the voters is coming soon,” O’Dea said in the statement last week.
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