Federal Bureau of Land Management to reduce recreational target shooting area in Arizona's Sonoran Desert

The proposed plan would cut permitted target shooting area in the AZ park from 435,700 acres to 5,295 acres

The federal Bureau of Land Management is looking to drastically reduce an area open to recreational target shooting within Arizona’s Sonoran Desert National Monument.

The agency announced Friday that a proposed resource management plan amendment would allow target shooting on 5,295 acres of the monument and be banned on the monument's remaining 480,496 acres.

Currently, target shooting is permitted on 435,700 acres of the monument that includes parts of Maricopa and Pinal counties.

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A BLM spokesperson said target shooting still is allowed on other bureau-managed lands in and around the Phoenix metropolitan area.

The Sonoran Desert National Monument was established in 2001.

The Federal Bureau of Land Management has proposed reducing recreational target shooting in the Sonoran Desert National Monument to better protect the resources and culture within. (Fox News)

Critics have argued that target shooting threatens cultural and natural resources the monument was designated to protect and has damaged objects such as saguaro cactus and Native American petroglyphs.

A notice announcing the beginning of a 60-day public comment period on the proposed target shooting closure was scheduled to be published in the Federal Register on Monday.

The BLM, an agency within the U.S. Department of the Interior, manages more than 245 million acres of public land located primarily in 12 Western states.

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