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Trump’s Bold Conservatism Can Save One of America’s Greatest Natural Treasures

Posted on Saturday, March 14, 2026
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by W. J. Lee
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When President Donald Trump addressed the nation’s governors at a dinner last month, he raised an issue few national leaders have dared to confront directly: the drying of Utah’s Great Salt Lake.

Soon afterward, he doubled down on social media, writing, “Very important to save the Great Salt Lake in Utah. This is an Environmental hazard that must be worked on, IMMEDIATELY.” The lake’s long-documented decline – losing more than 60 percent of its surface area and 70 percent of its volume since a high point in the 1980s – is not merely a regional concern. It is a genuine environmental crisis that threatens the health, economy, and future of much of the Intermountain West.

The stakes are enormous. The Great Salt Lake began 2026 at one of its lowest levels on record. As the shoreline retreats, vast stretches of lakebed containing arsenic, mercury, and other toxic metals are exposed and can be lifted and carried by wind. If the lake continues shrinking, carcinogenic dust storms could threaten the health of more than two million Utah residents.

The ecological consequences would be just as severe. The lake supports one of North America’s most important migratory bird ecosystems, hosting millions of birds each year. If it continues to decline, wildlife habitat would collapse while Utah’s tourism, ski, mineral extraction, and real estate industries would face significant economic damage.

Utah Governor Spencer Cox confirmed after the dinner that he is drafting a proposal for Trump that could seek up to $1 billion in federal support. The details have not yet been made public, but the scale of the request raises an important question: how should conservatives approach a complex environmental problem like this?

Trump is right that conservatives should welcome the challenge with boldness. In fact, conservative governing principles may offer the lake its best hope. Liberals’ environmental policy in projects across the nation has relied on blank-check spending, sprawling bureaucracies, and little accountability that produces precious few results. Conservative stewardship by contrast offers practical solutions, measurable outcomes, and policies focused on results rather than rhetoric.

In the case of the Great Salt Lake, the need is simple: the lake must receive more water.

Trump and Utah can also learn from past environmental failures and delayed achievements. In California, the diversion of rivers feeding Owens Lake in the 20th century transformed a thriving marsh ecosystem into a dry alkali basin that became the largest source of hazardous dust pollution in North America. The remediation effort required billions of dollars and decades of work due to political leaders deflecting responsibility, encouraging a host of lawsuits, and wasting money on ineffective environmental contractors engaged in “disaster profiteering.”

The Great Salt Lake is more than ten times larger than Owens Lake. Waiting until the problem becomes irreversible would be far more expensive and dangerous.

So, what should conservatives do?

The first step is recognizing that saving the lake requires a strategy grounded in practical action. A serious plan should follow a three-tiered approach: prevent catastrophe, stabilize water levels, and ultimately restore the lake.

Prevention means stopping the worst-case scenarios before they unfold. One practical step would be constructing a network of berms or dikes to create shallow flooding systems that cover exposed lakebed and suppress toxic dust storms. A similar approach has already proven effective at Owens Lake, where targeted flooding dramatically reduced airborne pollutants.

In 2025, Utah House Speaker Mike Schultz proposed building berms that would allow limited water supplies to pool over exposed hotspots and form a protective salt crust. Projects like these will not restore the lake on their own, but they could provide a critical safeguard for millions of Utahns.

The next phase is stabilization – ensuring that the lake stops shrinking. That requires improving water flows from rivers that feed the lake while increasing conservation across the watershed.

Liberal critics often single out agriculture, which uses roughly 71 percent of Utah’s developed water supply. But farmers are not villains. Agriculture remains the backbone of rural Utah and a cornerstone of the state’s economy. Forcing farmers to surrender their water rights would abandon the principle of private property while creating a precedent more damaging than the environmental crisis we are trying to solve.

Instead, Utah has demonstrated that cooperation works better than coercion. Businesses and churches have voluntarily transferred water rights to help refill the lake. In 2023, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints donated more than 20,000 acre-feet, believed to be the largest permanent donation in state history. The business community has also raised hundreds of millions of dollars to modernize irrigation and conservation.

The state also took an extraordinary step in January by purchasing the bankrupt U.S. Magnesium plant and its water rights for $30 million. The acquisition will keep roughly 144,000 acre-feet of water flowing to the lake each year, one of the largest single boosts to the lake’s inflow.

These actions demonstrate a distinctly conservative solution. Instead of endless litigation or heavy-handed regulation, Utah secured results through voluntary cooperation and targeted investment.

But the lake needs more than 700,000 acre-feet of annual water inflow for the next handful of years to return to healthy levels. So, the state’s efforts are a good first step, but Trump’s federal partnership is paramount to finding a permanent solution.

The final restoration phases of a plan will require federal action to force multiply Utah’s efforts. Returning the lake to healthy levels will demand smarter water management across the basin, including wetland restoration, upstream conservation, and continued collaboration between government and the private sector.

Trump’s emphasis on bold innovation may also open new possibilities for the entire West. Underground desert aquifers are proving to harbor previously hidden water reserves of vast proportions. The U.S. Geological Survey estimates 900 million acre-feet of groundwater exist within aquifers in the Southwest alluvial basin alone.

Advances in horizontal drilling now make it possible to access previously unreachable water reserves, offering long-term opportunities to strengthen water security across multiple states in the region if the Federal government will incentivize private sector exploration.

This moment offers conservatives an opportunity to lead. Environmental stewardship was born in the conservative movement, most notably through the likes of President Teddy Roosevelt. Many of America’s most successful conservation efforts were guided by leaders who understood that protecting natural resources and preserving economic vitality are not mutually exclusive goals.

The Great Salt Lake does not need ideological lectures or another stack of federal reports. It needs leadership willing to measure success by the simple metric of whether the lake begins to rise again.

President Trump is right. The Great Salt Lake’s decline is a real environmental challenge. But it is also an opportunity to prove that disciplined, accountable, conservative governance can solve problems where the Left’s bureaucratic environmentalism too often fails.

W.J. Lee has served in the White House, NASA, on multiple campaigns, and in nearly all levels of government.

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Donna
Donna
4 months ago

Thank God for giving us a President that is genuinely concerned for our nation.

Commentary
Commentary
3 months ago

President Trump sure has a lot of balls in the air but he seems to be juggling them all with skill, ability and talent. Thank you for all you do, President Trump. We are so blessed to have you in the WH.

907Eliza
907Eliza
3 months ago

An actual real environmental issue, not the imagined or fabricated the left use for power and control. Then add it is being dealt with, logically and realistically, minus drama and political games we are usually subjected.

Charles
Charles
3 months ago

Once again Trump is thinking of Americans and restoration of the country from Democrat neglect.

Gloria Jean Baxter
Gloria Jean Baxter
4 months ago

Far too long the dislocation of USA government from conservation of USA resources has happened. It is simple that most efforts to help natural resources is to research and report for remotely behind our leaders’ desks never resolving issues. Somehow the non-working politicians with too many benefits and too many vacations “just do not care” and ignore their duties abd responsibilities of which we give uninterrupted high-wage payments.
.

Barrett T Smith
Barrett T Smith
3 months ago

Trump could save it and the dems would be against conservation.

Philip Seth Hammersley
Philip Seth Hammersley
3 months ago

CA “progressives” [aka NUTS] let clean water run into the ocean to save snail darters and other microorganisms. Meanwhile, they have no way of putting out wildfires which pollute the atmosphere a lot more than carbon dioxide!

Thinking
Thinking
3 months ago

Why is this now such a big problem. There never was very much water in Salt Lake. . Why haven’t environmentalists jumped on this years ago. Where is Gore and his cohorts? Flying around the world spending environmental funds in foreign countries?. They seem to think the environment isn’t hurting beyond the east and west coast. Where is Greta, oh yes destroying Israel and now Cuba is her cause. How dare you Greta? You abandoned America. Why? It made you a star. You have lived off the billionaires that supported you to sell their solar panels and windmills to the unsuspecting people who listened to the mind of a child. And she and her supporters call President Trump stupid. How dare you Greta. You should show more respect for your elders who know a little more than the drivel they sold you when you were a teener. Utah always has been under stress from atomic testing in the salt flats and in Nevada. We were told when this testing was going on to stay I Indoors. This was more than 60 years ago. They have open copper mines and the dust flying around the city was very prevalent in the 1950’s and 1960’s. The damage has been done. Will a billion dollar fix the problem? I doubt it. It is a salt lake, remember!!!

Virgini
Virgini
3 months ago

Once again I will say it DJT is by far the best PRESIDENT and LEADER in my lifetime. GOD BLESS HIM!!MAY HE LIVE TO SEE HIS DETRACTORS WIPE THE SLOP OFF OF THEIR FACES!!!!!!! MAGA MAGA MAGA

Fr. Timothy Cremeens, PhD
Fr. Timothy Cremeens, PhD
3 months ago

So much for the liberal argument that conservatives aren’t interested in environmental issues!

Joe
Joe
3 months ago

Watch out for the anti-American judges!!!! All they do is crap on President Trump’s agenda with their liberal rulings.

anna hubert
anna hubert
3 months ago

I appreciate the concern, but nothing is as it once been, oceans are polluted terribly, rivers, you name it, it’s the human activity, industry, that which we call progress, we are aware of the damage, but there still are huge parts of the world that pollute to no end and somehow all Gretas are OK with that. We have no idea of the damage and devastation in China, former Soviet Union ,unless something can’t be kept secret, and leaks out, we do not know and they don’t tell Environmentalists don’t ask.

Seeking truth
Seeking truth
3 months ago

When some elected fail to uphold the law, they must be prosecuted.

Why are they not?

  1. Late in passing and meetign deadlines – a law.
  2. 2. Failure to fund those who enforce the law – illegals.
  3. 3. Raide det without votes to do so.
  4. 4. Fail to enforce laws.
  5. Allow some to destroy property paid for with taxpayer money.
  6. hut government serives that taxpayers have paid for, illegal, and must be enforced and those responsible charged and tried.

A few that a class action suit would addresss.

D.A. Ladensohn
D.A. Ladensohn
3 months ago

Teddy Roosevelt was a Conservative?? A great conservationist, but hardly a Conservative. He was an extremely progressive president, challenging the great corporate trusts of his day.

Billboy Baggins
Billboy Baggins
3 months ago

How did such high levels of arsenic and mercury get there in the first place?

Brian
Brian
3 months ago

What if we were to pump seawater from the west coast? Choose a path that has the lowest elevation? This can reduce the salinity of the lake?

There have been years when there was flooding. The same pipeline can be used to pump the other way out west into the Pacific?

Come to think of it: Another pipeline could be built to pump flooding waters from the Mississippi and Missouri rivers along the Platte river thru Nebraska, Kansas, Idaho, Colorado all the way to Denver. This will enable Colorado to stop pumping water from the Rocky Mountains (currently used to fill Aurora Reservoir) and re-direct that water into the Colorado River that flows thru Lake Powell and Hoover Dam.

CharlieSeattle
CharlieSeattle
3 months ago

Use HAARP to create more rain but wisely.

Robin Walter Boyd
Robin Walter Boyd
3 months ago

How about we stop diverting water from the Bear, Weber and Jordan Rivers for other than agriculture? Why do environmentalists ever blame the real culprits of water shortages, which are mostly due to water being diverted for economic gain, rather than constantly blame “global warming” and “climate change”? This is a rhetorical question. We all know it’s about the vast amount of tax money that is wasted to support politicians who pass more environmental regulations.

Gene
Gene
3 months ago

Let’s solicit the funds from the somalian learing centers across the US.

Tim
Tim
3 months ago

Excellent. Now if this administration could also dedicate some resources to fixing up the national park system. Fixing DC to make a favorable impression on foreign visitors is great, but there are probably more visitors to National Parks like Yellowstone, Grand Tetons, Glacier, Crater Lake, etc. And it could improve animal, visitor and fire safety as well.

Annie
Annie
3 months ago

Chemtrails causing either extreme weather, droughts, decline of bees. They spray us everyday. Look up geoengineeringwatch.org, frankenskies.com or on Amazon Prime video Climate Trails.

Robert Chase
Robert Chase
3 months ago

Sensible people are typically held back by the greedy. Our national treasures are seen as profit opportunities by the unscrupulous. Seems these ideas are just right for the action needed to benefit all.

Mike Taylor
Mike Taylor
4 months ago

So while the Dems for years have been handing out millions of dollers to illegal’s and to fill there own pockets it is now Trump that is the bad gye because he wants to help save the Grate Salt Lake ?
Your TDS IS SHOWING
You do know that is a verified medical condition LOL

Mike Taylor
Mike Taylor
4 months ago

Sounds like TDS too me

Mike Taylor
Mike Taylor
4 months ago

So sad from talking about fixing the Grate Salt Lake to nothing more than a bunch of
TDS Bull Crap

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