Monday, January 12, 2009

Wilderness bill moves forward in the Senate

In a rare Sunday session, the Senate advanced legislation that would set aside more than 2 million acres in nine states as wilderness. Majority Democrats assembled more than enough votes to overcome GOP stalling tactics in an early showdown for the new Congress. Republicans complained that Democrats did not allow amendments on the massive bill, which calls for the largest expansion of wilderness protection in 25 years. But Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and other Democrats said the bill — a holdover from last year — was carefully written and included measures sponsored by both Republicans and Democrats. By a 66-12 vote, with only 59 needed to limit debate, lawmakers agreed to clear away procedural hurdles despite partisan wrangling that had threatened pledges by leaders to work cooperatively as the new Obama administration takes office. Senate approval is expected later this week. Supporters hope the House will follow suit....

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sadly western senators, including the 2 from
Wyoming voted for Reid & the "me only" enviros. I guess a politician is a politician no matter where they live and they will go with who has the most to give them.

Anonymous said...

Marion, come into the real world.
The Wyoming Senators voted for bills that had broad support including businesses and only affect the gas industry in a limited way. You can still snowmobile, ride ATV's and do all that other stuff in the Wy Range.