| FORESTS
FOREVER ALERTS
February
20, 2009
Next Challenge
for Congress: Pass the Wilderness Stimulus Bill
Urge
the House to pass the Omnibus Public Land Management Act
Now that President Barack
Obama has signed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act into
law, the U.S. Congress is turning its attention to other pressing
matters.
When the Congress convenes
on Feb. 23 a top priority for the House of Representatives is taking
up the matter of S. 22, the Omnibus Public Land Management Act of
2009. That sweeping package of wilderness-protection bills enjoys
strong bi-partisan support. It was passed overwhelmingly (73 yea,
21 nay) by the Senate on Jan. 15 and now awaits House action.
The bill would protect lands in 32 states, designating 2,000,000
acres as wilderness areas in nine states including California and
stepping up forest-restoration efforts.
In California alone,
the bill would protect more than 750,000 acres of wilderness and
105 miles of wild and scenic rivers.
It’s vital that the House votes to approve the measure without
amendments that would send the legislation back to the Senate for
negotiations, which could drag on for months.
TO TAKE ACTION:
Make a call: Dial your
Representative at (202) 224-3121 (the Capitol Hill switchboard will
direct you) and let him or her know you urge passage of this legislation
– without amendments! Amendments would send the bill back
to the Senate for further negotiations that could take months.
Write a letter [sample
below]:
Subject: Omnibus Public
Land Management Act
Dear Senator or Representative _______________:
I urge you to support
the Omnibus Public Land Management Act (S. 22), an historic opportunity
to protect important and spectacular California natural areas.
The California bills
contained in the omnibus package will permanently protect vital
forests and watersheds, including the headwaters of the Upper Owens
River in the Eastern Sierra and Piru Creek in the Angeles National
Forest.
The California wilderness
and wild river bills in the package are broadly supported in forest
communities because they improve local economies and quality of
life.
Please support the measure
and oppose any amendments. This is a rare, important moment for
America's public lands and your support will benefit future generations.
Sincerely,
[Your signature]
IN DEPTH:
California landmarks
that could be protected under the Omnibus Public Land Management
Act of 2009 include 115,000 acres within Sequoia-Kings Canyon National
Park; 200,000 acres in Riverside County, including additions to
Joshua Tree National Park and the San Jacinto and Santa Rosa Mountains
National Monument; and more than 500,000 acres in Inyo, Mono, and
northern Los Angeles counties, including additions to the Hoover
Wilderness in the Sierra Nevada, and protection for the White Mountains,
America’s highest desert mountain range.
The Act also would establish
the 26-million-acre National Landscape Conservation System which
will help to protect the crown jewels of the Bureau of Land Management
(BLM) holdings, including more than 800 individual units: 15 National
Monuments, 13 National Conservation Areas, the Headwaters Forest
Reserve in northern California, 38 Wild and Scenic Rivers, 183 Wilderness
Areas, and more than 5,100 miles of National Scenic and Historic
Trails.
California lands in
the package include:
* HOOVER WILDERNESS
ADDITIONS (some 79,820 acres in the Humboldt-Toiyabe and Inyo National
Forests, identified as “Hoover East Wilderness Addition,”
“Hoover West Wilderness Addition,” and “Bighorn
Proposed Wilderness Addition.”
* JOHN MUIR WILDERNESS
ADDITIONS (some 70,411 acres in the Inyo National Forest as well
as BLM lands in Inyo County);
* ANSEL ADAMS WILDERNESS
ADDITION (some 528 acres in the Inyo National Forest);
* WHITE MOUNTAINS WILDERNESS
(about 230,000 acres in the Inyo National Forest as well as BLM
land in Mono County);
* GRANITE MOUNTAIN WILDERNESS
(some 34,342 acres in the Inyo National Forest as well as BLM lands
in Mono County).
* MAGIC MOUNTAIN WILDERNESS
(some 12, 282 acres in the Angeles National Forest);
* PLEASANT VIEW RIDGE
WILDERNESS (nearly 27,000 acres in the Angeles National Forest).
This bill will benefit rural communities by protecting the wild
landscapes that attract recreation, visitor spending, and business
investment.
California legislators
supporting the legislation include Sens. Barbara Boxer (D-Greenbrae)
and Diane Feinstein (D-San Francisco), and Reps. Howard “Buck”
McKeon (R-Santa Clarita), Mary Bono Mack (R-Palm Springs), Jim Costa
(D-Fresno) , George Radanovich (R-Mariposa), Duncan Hunter (R-Lakeside),
Darrel Issa (R-Vista), Mike Thompson (D-St. Helena), Gary Miller
(R-Diamond Bar), Ken Calvert (R-Riverside), Lois Capps (D-Santa
Barbara), and David Dreier (R- La Verne).
___________________________
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