From Deseret News archives:
Interior bill stripped of wilds section
Groups say it could lead to roads in parks
However, Utah officials say the language removed from the bill was unnecessary because roads in such pristine areas are already banned by a recent deal struck between Utah and the Department of Interior.
Environmentalists are skeptical.
"By removing the language, Congress lets the Bush administration give away America's treasured wild lands to profiteering developers," said Mike Matz, executive director of the Campaign for America's Wilderness.
"Although the language wasn't perfect because it left tens of millions of acres of lands the public owns open to destruction, keeping the provision in the bill would have been a critical first step in preserving wilderness for future generations."
What negotiators stripped from the bill late Monday was wording given essentially as a consolation prize last July to environmental groups, after they failed to block federal funding to clear any local claims to roads, paths and trails that crisscross federal lands in Utah.
They said that gave up nothing, because roads in those areas were already banned by a memorandum of understanding between Gov. Mike Leavitt and Interior Secretary Gale Norton on how to process claims to roads by states.
That had environmental groups wondering aloud Tuesday why Westerners would strip the compromise language from the Interior appropriations bill if it truly were innocuous and merely duplicative.
"Congress is letting the Bush administration give away public lands to special interests," said Amy Mall with the Natural Resources Defense Council. "The administration's sneaky, underhanded move could eventually unleash bulldozers and off-road vehicles on millions of acres of federally protected wild lands."
The claims to federal land are made through an 1866 law called "R.S. 2477," which allowed local governments to make roads on federal lands not otherwise reserved by Congress. It was repealed in 1976, but allowed existing R.S. 2477 roads to remain in local hands. The trouble is, no inventory of the roads existed.
Comments
- Reject vote in Honduras, Zelaya urges 11:30 p.m.
- Bomb kills anti-Taliban lawmaker 11:30 p.m.
- Bengals turn back defending 4A champs 10:57 p.m.
- BYU looks to improve rebounding 10:37 p.m.
- Utahns growing tired of Bennett 10:36 p.m.
- More depression, STDs in minorities 10:32 p.m.
- Utah population tops 2.8M 10:31 p.m.
- Obama: 'Our security is at stake' 10:29 p.m.
- Laid-off Utahns could lose coverage 10:22 p.m.
- Water year off to dry start 10:21 p.m.
- 2 citations issued at Y.-U. game
- BYU says Hall incident resolved
- Max Hall: a fixture in rivalry lore
- 'Grandfamilies' a growing trend
- Witness: Mitchell wanted attention
- Mitchell called intelligent, controlling
- MWC '09 season in review
- Jazz win 6th in 7 games
- Jazz ready to be without Harpring
- Daughter: Mitchell fed me my pet
- Hall mouths off about hate of Utah
904 - Cougars beat Utes in overtime
482 - Hall reprimanded by MWC
401 - Max Hall issues apology
387 - Hall's pain reflects self-betrayal
347 - Utes won't respond to Hall
275 - BYU says Hall incident resolved
236 - 2 citations issued at Y.-U. game
161 - BYU is champion of the state
143 - Religion in politics is tiresome
128
My husband was teaching his 6th-grade class in Salt Lake last year when...
The Republican Party is in a quandry. All of the Southern States, south of...
How can the polls mean anything at this point if the season? It will...
My wife and I went to see The Blind Side the other day and we saw the very...
killer at home, have a great coach, will be tough to beat with all our tools....
Adoption agencies have to do this to keep afloat. There is often a division...
31% of the board voted for the other guy. Looks like Brems won.
Max will be remembered in one of two ways...some will remember him for being...
like i said delgado do work on wasatch!!!
Thank God my wife is Japanese and we can return to Japan and participate in...
I have followed the Utah/BYU rivalry since I was a boy back in the 1950s....

You can be the first to comment on this story.