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Thursday, January 22, 2009

Residents Oppose Wilderness for the Panamint Valley Area

4x4 Access and Conservation - Access and Land Use Written by John Stewart

Tuesday, 20 January 2009 22:38 Trona, CA, (Jan 14, 2009): On Tuesday, the California Wilderness Coalition met with representative of the Searles Valley Minerals to review a CWC proposal for wilderness and potential impacts on plant operations. The plant manager later opened the meeting to let the general public hear the proposal and provide comment. Over 300 people attended the public meeting to listen to the CWC wilderness proposal. CWC representatives Ryan Hensen and Laurel Williams explained they are interested in providing legislative protection to the lands while retaining access to the routes used by recreation for access to desert areas.For purposes of this meeting, Searles Valley and the Great Falls Basin were the only areas open for discussion. Efforts to include Surprise Canyon in the discussion were rebuffed as irrelevant.During the CWC presentation, statistics were presented that indicated wilderness provided an economic growth and use of wilderness areas was increasing. John Stewart, Natural Resource Consultant for California Association of 4 Wheel Drive Clubs challenged the data presented. Stewart noted that the numbers presented were for a mid-1990 time frame and did not reflect recent data indicating that use of wilderness areas has been in decline for the past 10 years. Further, the growth of motorized recreation on public lands has increased by over 25% during that period.In addition, Stewart stated the CA4WDC hosts the annual Panamint Valley Days event that brings significant financial contributions to the local economy. That economy impact for one weekend exceed the recorded hiking days per year for the area. Stewart noted, "Public meetings have a general tone to describe the meeting. This meeting had no general tone, only a direct, pointed message that said: No wilderness in our desert. Go back to your city life, We know how to care for our desert."The CWC is seeking to gather "public support" for a wilderness proposal that identifies routes of travel and areas of special interest to exclude from wilderness. All other lands between the identified routes will be designated as wilderness. CWC representatives declined to guarantee that identified routes would be formally excluded, only that their proposal would request they be excluded.While still being developed, the entire wilderness proposal is expected to exceed 600,000 acres. While some is converting existing wilderness study area to wilderness, much of the acreage is expanding existing wilderness to preclude economic development. When pressed, CWC representatives did acknowledge their goal is to protect the desert from industrial development, Their definition of "industrial development" is mining and renewable energy projects.

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Thursday, January 15, 2009

Senate poised to shut OHVs out of more than 1 million acres of public land

PICKERINGTON, Ohio -- The U.S. Senate is poised to act as early as Sunday on a massive package of public lands bills that would shut motorcyclists out of more than 1 million acres without adequate public comment, the American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) reports.The last-minute move just as the newly elected Congress takes over has raised the ire of the AMA and at least one congressman, who believe the proposal and process deserve more public participation."Those who say things get better with time obviously never encountered the public lands omnibus bill," said U.S. Rep. Rob Bishop (R-Utah). "This bill was a bad idea last Congress, and it's only gotten worse over the past month."Ed Moreland, AMA vice president for government relations, agreed."It makes little sense to lump together more than 160 very important public lands bills into one package that is nearly 1,300 pages long, and then expect the public to digest it all -- and to rush a vote through the Senate on a weekend," Moreland said. More than 160 public lands bills have been grouped together by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. The package would create more than 1 million acres of designated Wilderness land, which would shut out all motorized vehicles.The last-minute congressional maneuver would also make the National Landscape Conservation System permanent. This system creates an additional level of bureaucracy for the National System of Public Lands and would remove much of the authority of the existing agency in managing those lands."Congress should put together a new package and pass it through committee rather than debate legislation carried over from the previous Congress," Rep. Bishop said. "Poor process produces poor product, and this is an example of congressional process at its worst. Parts of this bill are good, and parts are very bad. Each part deserves to be discussed and voted on its own merits.""Continued responsible access to public lands is a vitally important right for current and future generations," added Moreland. "This measure deserves to be fully analyzed and thoughtfully debated in the next Congress prior to a final vote."All AMA members and anyone else who enjoys outdoor recreation are urged to contact their U.S. senators and ask them to oppose the omnibus public lands bill. An easy way to contact your senators is in the "Issues & Legislation" area of the Rights section of the AMA website at http://rs6.net/tn.jsp?e=0019ntUFqTJcM7vz5TTFrlxUFm8O2XhjmC5mXq3zd68CAlzqiINYjb-xIhiCfIf_5OfreFbqv6ew9iArU5LiIbFU-KF5g4Iaw1T0szzGJJi0YVHQulS9y6ASD1hZipSa3Ng.

About the American Motorcyclist AssociationSince 1924, the AMA has promoted and protected the motorcycling lifestyle. AMA members come from all walks of life and they navigate many different routes on their journey to the same destination: freedom on two wheels. As the world's largest motorcycle organization with nearly 300,000 members, the AMA advocates for motorcyclists' interests in the halls of local, state and federal government, the committees of international governing organizations and the court of public opinion. Through member clubs, promoters and partners, the AMA sanctions more motorsports competition events than any other organization in the world. Through its Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum, the AMA preserves the heritage of motorcycling for future generations. For more information, visit http://www.americanmotorcyclist.com/

"Federal wilderness protection for California land moves forward" (Los Angeles Times, 1/12/09) "Large swaths of California wild lands would gain federal wilderness protection under legislation that took a step toward approval in the U.S. Senate during a rare Sunday session ... It would designate as wilderness -- the government's highest protection -- about 190,000 acres in Riverside County, including parts of Joshua Tree National Park; about 450,000 acres in the Eastern Sierra and San Gabriel Mountains north of Los Angeles; and about 90,000 acres in Sequoia-Kings Canyon National Parks..."Note: This news site may require free registration to view its content online.http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-wilderness12-2009jan12,0,5425754.story

"Plan to set aside more wilderness land advances in U.S. Senate" (Bloomberg News, 1/11/09)
"The U.S. Senate, in its first order of business this year, advanced a $10 billion conservation plan that would set aside more than 2 million acres of natural wilderness and protect 1,000 miles of scenic rivers. The Omnibus Public Lands Management Act, the first piece of legislation considered by the new Senate, combines about 160 individual environmental bills in nearly 1,300 pages ... The Senate will debate and vote on the bill’s passage this week." Part of the bill would codify the the National Landscape Conservation System, managed by the BLM.http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=apzMY6TV_xQo&refer=us"Massive lands bill clears filibuster" (Washington Times, 1/12/09)

"Senate Democrats flexed their new legislative muscle Sunday, using the first vote of the new Congress to break a Republican filibuster from the previous session of Congress, and advance a wide-ranging land-conservation measure. The omnibus land bill would preserve more than 2 million acres of land, establish new layers of bureaucracy in the Bureau of Land Management..."http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/jan/12/massive-lands-bill-clears-filibuster/


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