Skip to content

News |
Outdoor party celebrates expansion of San Gabriel Mountains National Monument

President Joe Biden’s May 2 proclamation adds 105, 919 acres of U.S. Forest Service lands to the south and west of the monument’s nearly 347,000 acres.

Prickly Pear Cactus grow next to the bike path. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)
Prickly Pear Cactus grow next to the bike path. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)
Author
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
  • Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging...

    Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

  • Senator Alex Padilla speaks. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at...

    Senator Alex Padilla speaks. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

  • Prickly Pear Cactus grow next to the bike path. Dignitaries...

    Prickly Pear Cactus grow next to the bike path. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

  • US Representative Judy Chu speaks. Dignitaries and their guests gathered...

    US Representative Judy Chu speaks. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

  • Park Rangers were among the dignitaries and their guests gathered...

    Park Rangers were among the dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

  • Senator Alex Padilla was among the dignitaries and their guests...

    Senator Alex Padilla was among the dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

  • Prickly Pear Cactus grow next to the bike path. Dignitaries...

    Prickly Pear Cactus grow next to the bike path. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

  • (L-r) Alejandro Padilla, his father Senator Alex Padilla, US Representative...

    (L-r) Alejandro Padilla, his father Senator Alex Padilla, US Representative Judy Chu, Congresswoman Grace Napolitano and Los Angeles Supervisor Hilda Solis were among the dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

  • Prickly Pear Cactus grow next to the bike path. Dignitaries...

    Prickly Pear Cactus grow next to the bike path. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

  • Congresswooman Grace Napoliano speaks. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at...

    Congresswooman Grace Napoliano speaks. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

  • Prickly Pear Cactus grow next to the bike path. Dignitaries...

    Prickly Pear Cactus grow next to the bike path. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

  • Familia Rodriguez Taquiza serves Dignitaries and their guests gathered at...

    Familia Rodriguez Taquiza serves Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

  • A bicyclist rides past native plants. Dignitaries and their guests...

    A bicyclist rides past native plants. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

  • Senator Alex Padilla, center with his son Alejandro (wearing a...

    Senator Alex Padilla, center with his son Alejandro (wearing a Dodger shirt) were among the dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

  • A bicyclist rides the bike path. Dignitaries and their guests...

    A bicyclist rides the bike path. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

  • View of the San Gabriel Mountains. Dignitaries and their guests...

    View of the San Gabriel Mountains. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

  • A California Tree Polly sits next to the bike path....

    A California Tree Polly sits next to the bike path. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

  • (L-r) Alejandro Padilla, his father Senator Alex Padilla, US Representative...

    (L-r) Alejandro Padilla, his father Senator Alex Padilla, US Representative Judy Chu, and Congresswoman Grace Napolitano were among the dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

of

Expand

Sen. Alex Padilla and Rep. Judy Chu, D-Pasadena, gathered supporters, tribal leaders and environmental groups to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument, which President Barack Obama designated in 2014.

President Joe Biden’s May 2 proclamation adds 105, 919 acres of U.S. Forest Service lands to the south and west of the monument’s nearly 347,000 acres. About 150 people attended the celebration, held at the Lario Staging Area in Irwindale on Saturday.


 

A bicyclist rides past native plants. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)
A bicyclist rides past native plants. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

Related:

Biden to expand national monument 

Snowy mountains draw avalanche of visitors to national forest 

President Obama declares national monument 

National forest plagued by closures from storms, fires, funding gaps 

Tribal leaders call for expanding San Gabriel Mountains National Monument


 

Chu and Padilla were fresh from a trip to the White House to see Biden sign the proclamation, which they said protects cultural, scientific, and historic objects, and expands access to outdoor recreation on shared public lands for generations. The proclamation also expanded the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument in northern California.

“Today, we do three things: one, we’re celebrating; two, we’re recognizing it took a lot of people a lot of years to get us to this moment; and three, we’re thanking President Biden,” Padilla said. “It took a lot of people a lot of years to get us to this moment. Californians don’t give up.”

Chu praised a grassroots campaign that started more than 20 years ago that will now protect wild lands from mining and development, including Chantry Flat in Arcadia, the Arroyo Seco, and federal forest lands in Sunland, Tujunga and Santa Clarita.

“I stand in awe of this incredible moment where we are taking such a historic step forward.” Chu said. “I was honored to be part of the ceremony at the White House where President Biden and Vice President (Kamala) Harris, who worked on this issue as a senator, welcomed us into the Oval Office and we got to watch the President make our vision a reality with a stroke of his pen.”

Chu announced the expansion brings with it resources, including $2.5 million from the Rivers and Mountains Conservancy; $2 million from California Conservation Corps to hire six new forest rangers; $2.3 million from the federal Great American Outdoors Act; and $1 million from Los Angeles County for the nonprofit Nature for All.

“All of this means more staff and rangers, better management and improved experiences for the millions of people who come to these mountains,” Chu said, adding the expanded monument will bring mental and physical health benefits associated with recreation and the outdoors which far too many low-income Angelenos miss out on.

Chu also announced $1.75 million for Nature for All’s Transit to Trails program which will allow people to use mass transit to come to the mountains, including all the way to Mt. Wilson Observatory.

Supervisor Hilda Solis remembers talking about the first glimmers of a San Gabriel Mountains National Monument with constituents and community groups when she was a state senator almost 30 years ago. She said Obama’s original designation in 2014 was “transformational.”


 

A California Tree Polly sits next to the bike path. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)
A California Tree Polly sits next to the bike path. Dignitaries and their guests gathered at the at Lario Staging Area on the San Gabriel River Bike Path to celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on May 11, 2024 in Irwindale, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)

Related:

Biden expands San Gabriel Mountains National Monument, adds forest rangers, funding

Larry Wilson: San Gabriel Mountains National Monument and the lands it once forgot

5 things to take away from the expansion of San Gabriel Mountains monument

Here’s when each of California’s 19 national monuments were established

Veterans find solace in San Gabriel Mountains National monument, lobby for its expansion


 

“These things don’t happen overnight, so much effort was put in by so many to make this a dream come true,” Solis said. “This was my backyard as a child growing up in La Puente. We didn’t have parks and pools but we had the mountains, and my father from Mexico would say, ‘This is ours and we have to take care of it.’”

The Sierra Club was an early supporter of the monument. Its executive director, Ben Jealous, said in a statement that national monuments protect more than landscapes.

“They preserve the historical, cultural and spiritual legacies of the people who have made this country what it is. Expanding the San Gabriels monument and protecting Molok Luyuk will have significant and immediate benefits for the communities, wildlife, and ecosystems of California. Millions of people will have greater access to nature, vital habitat will be preserved for imperiled species, and critical water resources will be safeguarded for those who rely on them.”

Jen Eberlein, regional forester for the USFS Pacific Southwest, said plans are underway to set protections in place, for this “amazing area, which contains cultural resources with thousands of years of occupation from Indigenous people, numerous threatened and endangered species and other wildlife, (and flora).”

Eberlein said the expansion will “enhance the resilience of Los Angeles basin communities and ecosystems from climate change and further conserve areas that provide drinking water to millions of people.”

Mike Jesus Lemos of the Kizh Nation Gabrieleño Band of Mission Indians offered a prayer in four directions at the start of the celebration marking victory in “a fight of deep significance for our people.”

“It’s a tremendous honor to be here because the land is always going to be here, but now we know it will be protected, including sacred solstice sites for my people, and it’s important for the youth to be inspired and experience this beauty,” Lemos said.

Other dignitaries in attendance included Rep. Grace Napolitano, D-El Monte; Victor Gordo, mayor of Pasadena; Brian Calderón Tabatabai, mayor of West Covina; Emmanuel Estrada, mayor of Baldwin Park; John Wu, mayor of San Gabriel; Assemblymember Mike Fong; Assemblymember Blanca Rubio; as well as councilmembers from Alhambra, Arcadia, Glendora; Monterey Park; and Rosemead.

Mariachis Lindas Mexicanas, themselves newly arrived from a Cinco de Mayo performance at the White House, presented a Mother’s Day serenade to end the festivities.