With the Bob Marshall Wilderness serving as the backdrop, U.S.
Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell and Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont.,
praised a group of ranchers and their conservation allies on Saturday
for doing what, not too many years ago, was unthinkable. Starting
back around 1992, when American Rivers listed the Blackfoot River as one
of America’s 10 most endangered waterways, a group of ranchers and
conservationists came together to address the problem. In the
years that have followed, the effort has expanded beyond anyone’s
expectations to encompass a landscape that spreads larger than the
boundaries of some Eastern states. More than 600,000 acres have
been conserved across the so-called Crown of the Continent, an area that
encompasses the Bob Marshall Wilderness Complex and Glacier National
Park. Added together, it all represents the most intact wildland in North America, and it has emerged as a national model. “You
know what you’ve got here and how special it is,” Jewell said. “You’re
setting a pathway forward that’s sustainable, takes into account the
challenges we face in our environment, and recognizes what’s at stake.” While
the efforts have been grand in both vision and achievement, much of the
success may be traced back to the Land and Water Conservation Fund, a
program established by Congress in 1965. Montana has received $400
million in LWCF funding through the years, Jewell said, and it has
helped conserve land while keeping it workable for ranchers and
accessible to the public. President Barack Obama is asking
Congress to fully fund the program at $900 million, though Jewell said
the funding isn’t guaranteed.
Ranchers urged Jewell to fight for the fund’s renewal. Jewell, in turn, said their voices would be needed at the table. “Your
voices in particular are really important on this,” Jewell said. “The
president has put full funding for LWCF in the budget for 2015, but it
will require legislation to get it reauthorized and get it across the
finish line.”...more
Thought I was gonna see a nice article showing how local folks could take positive action. Instead, the whole article is a paean to the Lands & Water Conservation Fund. Obama has released his budget proposal, its appropriation time, and this whole piece is nothing but a lobbying effort.
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
1 comment:
Don't be surprised. Reporter Mr. Kidston was a complete shill for the enviros in Wyoming when he worked that beat.
Then Martin left to be a PR guy for the Montana Democratic Party for a short while, then came slinking back to the Missoulian where he took up his Green Is Good cudgel once again.
And of course this is a dog and pony for LWCF, which has basically served as a disposal mechanism for Plum Creek, the big timber REIT.
Mow it off, wrap it in a conservation bow, and sell it to Uncle for way more than it's worth.
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