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Signs to alter access at Martin's Cove site

Published: Thursday, May 18, 2006 12:00 a.m. MDT
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CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) — An agreement has been reached on the management of Martin's Cove, a stretch of federal land where Mormon handcart pioneers died in a blizzard 150 years ago.

The Bureau of Land Management announced the agreement between the agency, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the American Civil Liberties Union Wednesday afternoon.

The settlement calls for the BLM and the church to use separate and distinct signs to clearly identify public land and public access.

Last year, four Wyoming residents filed a lawsuit arguing that the BLM should not have entered a 25-year lease with the Mormon church to manage the site, west of Casper. The lawsuit claimed that Mormon tour guides at Martin's Cove proselytized to visitors.

Attorneys for the BLM and the church have denied those charges.

Megan Hayes, the Laramie attorney who filed the federal lawsuit, said the agreement ensures that people can have access to public lands without having to go through the church visitor center area that is nearby.

Kim Farah, a spokeswoman for the LDS Church, said the church was not prepared to comment on the case Wednesday afternoon.

BLM spokesman Steven Hall said the agency would start reworking existing signs and putting up new signs at the site as soon as possible. He said the cost of the new signs would be minimal.

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