Wilderness News

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Wilderness advocates can participate in American Great Outdoors ‘listening session’

Durango Herald (CO)
Aaron Kimple and Barbara Hawke
July 25th, 2010

Coloradans have long chosen a way of life full of hard work and independent thinking.

As global events and economies increasingly affect our way of life in western Colorado, it becomes ever more important to stay active in planning for our lands and resources.

Opinion: Wilderness designation a rare chance to shape our Earth

Rapid City Journal (SD)
John Brockelsby
July 24th, 2010

I am one of the many local citizens who have long awaited the momentous step U.S. Sen. Tim Johnson recently took: introducing legislation todesignate 48,000 acres of wilderness within the Buffalo Gap National Grassland.

When I was a kid, my dad often took me camping out at Indian Creek. It wasn't your typical cozy Black Hills forest campground with tent sites and lavatories.

The stark, wide-open, raw beauty of the wild prairie and badlands awed me in a completely different way. Its ruggedness and powerful silence left a lifelong impression on me.

Opinion: Friends of Allegheny Wilderness president explains mission

The Bradford Era (PA)
Bob Stoudt
July 23rd, 2010

I am honored to write today as the new President of the Board of Directors for the Warren-based non-profit organization Friends of Allegheny Wilderness (FAW). Though other organizations seek to eliminate logging in the Allegheny National Forest (ANF) and oppose all oil and gas activities, FAW seeks instead to foster cooperation among seemingly opposing interests to protect additional areas in the ANF as wilderness while respecting the need to ensure a sustainable, economically viable future for the entire region. 

Future of Cedar Mesa wilderness proposal unclear

Salt Lake Tribune (UT)
Patty Henetz
July 22nd, 2010

San Juan County residents who don't want Sen. Bob Bennett's land bill to die have formed a grassroots organization, Friends of Cedar Mesa, to keep citizens in the loop while wilderness-designation discussions hang in limbo.

Mark Meloy, a retired river ranger for the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, says Friends of Cedar Mesa seeks to let the citizens' voice be part of any wilderness or other conservation protections for the region in southeastern Utah.

Opinion: Do we have enough wilderness?

The Western News (Libby, MT)
Molly Montana
July 22nd, 2010

Many of us have heard the opinion expressed many times in Lincoln County that we have enough wilderness already. As a longtime wilderness supporter, I have learned that people who state this opinion often have little idea of how much wilderness we actually have.

Most folks are surprised to learn that only about 2 percent of Lincoln County is presently protected as wilderness, which is the Cabinet Mountains Wilderness Area.

Preserving wilderness

Johnson City Press (TN)
Chelsea Farnam
July 22nd, 2010

If a picture is worth a thousand words, then a new book featuring photography of the Blue Ridge Mountains might offer quite an earful - which is exactly the goal of a conservation group presenting the book to the public at East Tennessee State University Thursday.

The book, titled "The Blue Ridge: Ancient and Majestic," features photography by Johnson City resident Jerry Greer and essays by Jonesborough resident Charles Maynard. It highlights the natural beauty of the world's oldest mountains, stretching from Georgia to Pennsylvania.

Wilderness bill moves out of Senate committee

Las Cruces Sun-News (NM)
July 22nd, 2010

A bill designating almost 350,000 acres in Do-a Ana County as wilderness and conservation areas was unanimously approved by a Senate committee Wednesday.

The Organ Mountains-Desert Peaks Wilderness Act, sponsored by New Mexico's U.S. Sens. Jeff Bingaman and Tom Udall, allows some public use - such as hunting and grazing - while protecting the granite peaks of the Organ Mountains and the volcanic cinder cones of the Portrillo Mountains from development.

Las Cruces Organ Mountains Desert Peaks Wilderness Act Clears Energy Committee

KRWG (NM)
July 21st, 2010

U.S. Senator Jeff Bingaman today reported that the Energy and Natural Resources Committee unanimously approved a bill that protects the Organ Mountains of Dona Ana County. Bingaman and Senator Tom Udall are sponsors of the bill. 

Opinion: Wilderness provides so much for state

Johnson City Press (TN)
Doug Scott
July 21st, 2010

"In order to assure that an increasing population, accompanied by expanding settlement and growing mechanization, does not occupy and modify all areas in the United States ... , leaving no lands designated for preservation and protection in their natural condition, it is hereby declared to be the policy of Congress to secure for the American people of this and future generations the benefits of an enduring resource of wilderness."

Opinion: Wilderness Excuses Don’t Hold Water

Albuquerque Journal (NM)
Don Patterson
July 18th, 2010

It has been five years since the debate about wilderness in Doña Ana County began in earnest. These discussions have taken many twists and turns but, thankfully, have resulted in the development of a sound and widely supported proposal for protecting sensitive wildands in our community.

As a wilderness supporter, I am proud to participate in a diverse coalition of organizations and citizens who have fought for the vision of protecting the Organ Mountains and nearby public lands.

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