Maintenance of Kanarraville water system closes portion of Spring Creek Canyon WSA

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Maintenance of Kanarraville water system closes portion of Spring Creek Canyon WSA

The following press releases was published by the U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management on March 29, 2017. It is reproduced in full below.

KANARRAVILLE, Utah - Maintenance to the town of Kanarraville’s water system will close the hiking trail to Kanarraville Falls through the Bureau of Land Management’s (BLM) Spring Creek Canyon Wilderness Study Area (WSA) to ensure public safety from April 3-6.

The town of Kanarraville maintains a right-of-way for the pipeline that supplies drinking water to the community.

Erosion from weather and from hikers exposed the pipeline along the trail and falling rocks pose a hazard to other sections of the pipeline. The town agreed to close the trail that begins on property maintained by Kanarraville and the Iron County Sheriff’s Office will enforce the closure.

Work on the pipeline will require some equipment to move through the creek in the WSA. Staff from the BLM’s Cedar City Field Office will monitor the work to help protect natural resources.

Kanarraville established the right-of-way for the pipeline with the BLM in 1969. In 1991, the town requested to move the pipeline as it made repairs, which resulted in an environmental assessment and approval by the BLM.

Spring Creek Canyon WSA includes a portion of the Hurricane Cliffs, an impressive west-facing escarpment that extends from north of Cedar City into northwestern Arizona. Two major canyons, Kanarra and Spring Creek, bisect the WSA with elevations ranging from 5,600 feet at the base of the cliffs to almost 7,900 feet on the ridge tops. Vegetation consists primarily of juniper, scrub oak, shrubs and grasses; however, along the riparian zone, sedges, rushes, cottonwoods and willows are prevalent.

Source: U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management

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