Colorado senators reintroduce San Juan wilderness proposal
A proposal to designate more than 60,000 acres in southwestern Colorado as either wilderness or a special management area is back before Congress.
U.S. Sens. Mark Udall and Michael Bennet are reintroducing the San Juan Mountains Wilderness Act, which enjoys support from all three affected counties — San Miguel, San Juan and Ouray — and most stakeholders. Udall and Bennet previously introduced the bill in 2009 along with companion legislation from then U.S. Rep. John Salazar, but it didn’t gain enough traction to become law.
“Unfortunately Congress failed to pass any wilderness bills last session,” the Telluride-based Sheep Mountain Alliance said in a statement posted on its website. “While we will continue to work with the senators to help this bill through committee, we also need to continue to educate (Salazar’s successor) Congressman (Scott) Tipton on the merits of this broadly supported land conservation proposal.”
Tipton is hosting a “listening session” for the proposal this Friday at Ridgway Town Hall.
The bill would designate 33,000 acres as wilderness — mostly as expansions of the existing Lizard Head and Mount Sneffels wilderness areas — in addition to adding mid-elevation lands to the system with a new area around 7,933-foot McKenna Peak, where imposing sandstone cliffs jut out of the plain.
The San Juan Mountains Wilderness Act would also designate about 22,000 acres as a special management area allowing some outdoor recreation activities such as hiking, hunting and fishing.
It would also withdraw over 6,000 acres within Naturita Canyon from oil and gas development.
“Not only will this bill ensure generations of Coloradans will be able to enjoy its stunning beauty, but it will also help create jobs and boost the economy of the entire area,” Udall said. “Hikers, outfitters, hunters, anglers and others interested in wildlife and the outdoors will continue to be drawn to the area, sparking more hospitality and recreation-related business. Despite the down economy, outdoor recreation is a strong and growing sector of the economy — one we should nurture and that will benefit everyone in the state.”
Preserving places of peaceful contemplation is an ethic the senator said he learned from his mother, Patricia “Sam” Udall. In his opening remarks at a National Parks Service subcommittee last week, Udall cracked a smile as he revealed that his mom was a member of the National Rifle Association.
“Many people are familiar with my father Congressman Mo Udall and my uncle Interior Secretary Stewart Udall and their work to promote conservation across the country. … But in my passion for conservation I often generally think more about my mother and how she was the real conservationist in our family,” Udall said. “She was a Coloradan, she raised six kids, she was a member, I found out later in life, of the NRA. She was a sharpshooter, a marksman, an angler and an equestrian as she encouraged my five brothers and sisters and me to get outside, to get dirt under our fingernails, to look at and also tackle the steepest climbs, to strap on our skis on the coldest days and on the coldest mountains.”
The subcommittee Udall chaired heard from National Park Service Director Jonathan B. Jarvis, whose agency issued a new forward-looking report as it prepares to turn 100 years old in 2016.
There are 36 action items in “A Call to Action: Preparing for A Second Century of Stewardship and Engagement,” which include an initiative to prevent lights from polluting the night sky around the Colorado Plateau; a program to enable 100,000 children a year to visit national parks; the overhaul of interpretive signs to provide more accurate information; and a goal of doubling, over 2009 levels, the amount of renewable energy generated within national parks and used by park facilities.
Rather than requesting new federal appropriations to reach its objectives, the National Park Service is looking to set up an endowment fund with a goal of generating $1 billion over the next 25 years.
“If you think about any other major institution in this country, whether it’s the Smithsonian or Harvard, they have an endowment that allows them to carry forward their programs in times of austerity and it provides a point for giving from an extremely philanthropic American people,” Jarvis said.
Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., sounded support for the endowment, even recommending a benefactor.
“Oh my goodness, you’re not asking for more money. I love it,” Paul said. “There’s this guy I keep hearing about in the news who has a lot of money and feels under-taxed, Warren Buffet. You ought to talk to him.”
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Comment posted July 10, 2011 @ 2:24 pm
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Comment posted July 10, 2011 @ 2:25 pm
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Comment posted July 12, 2011 @ 2:00 pm
Mother Jones, of course, is always happy to take any opportunity to excoriate pro-life, Republican candidates and make them look less than consistent, even when they have been thoroughly pro-life.
The fact of the matter is that, as it admits, Governor Pawlenty has an extensively long pro-life record (see http://www.lifenews.com/2011/05/23/pro-life-governor-tim-pawlenty-seeks-gop-nomination-for-2012/).
To the point, Pawlenty has already said he would sign a Federal bill banning taxpayer funding for the Planned Parenthood abortion business.
(http://www.lifenews.com/2011/06/07/tim-pawlenty-i-would-sign-ban-on-planned-parenthood-funding/)
“I don’t think taxpayer money should be used to fund organizations that are involved in performing abortions. I think most Americans would agree with that and I strongly would agree with that and would lead those efforts,” Pawlenty said about the bill.
Also, none of the family planning money in any of the grants mentioned in this article funded abortions, only contraception. And none of the funds were allowed to go to agencies that do abortions.
The Family Planning State Grant Helps Fund Contraceptives For Low Income Women. “Minnesota first saw the sense of this argument back in 1978 – and responded by creating the
Family Planning State Grant to fund contraceptive clinics for low-income women.” (Opinion, “A Wise Investment In Family Planning,” Minneapolis Star Tribune, 6/3/07)
The Family Planning Grants Statute Prohibits Funds From Going To Non-Profits Which Perform Abortions. “The commissioner shall not make special grants pursuant to this section to any nonprofit corporation which performs abortions.” (145.925, Minnesota Statutes 2007, “Family Planning Grants,” Subd. 2, https://www.revisor.mn.gov/bin/getpub.php?pubtype=STAT_CHAP_SEC&year=current§ion=145.925&image.x=26&image.y=1)
Meanwhile, Governor Pawlenty has been a strong supporter of abstinence education and received federal grant money for the state for those efforts.
Pawlenty Has Been A Longtime Supporter Of Abstinence-Only Education. “Pawlenty, a longtime supporter of abstinence-only sex education, chose to submit just one application to the federal government, she said.” (Josephine Marcotty, “Pawlenty Rejects $850,000 Federal Grant For Sex Ed,” Minneapolis Star Tribune, http://www.startribune.com/politics/101849063.html, 8/30/10)
Pawlenty Accepted $500,000 In Abstinence Only Education. “Gov. Tim Pawlenty has rejected a federal teen pregnancy prevention grant worth $850,000, with no strings attached,
while giving his approval for $500,000 in abstinence-only money that will cost the state $379,000 in matching funds.” (Josephine Marcotty, “Pawlenty Rejects $850,000 Federal Grant For Sex Ed,” Minneapolis Star Tribune, http://www.startribune.com/politics/101849063.html, 8/30/10)
Governor Tim Pawlenty is a very strongly pro-life presidential candidate — and perhaps has the longest and most extensive pro-life record of any of the GOP candidates seeking the Republican nomination to take on pro-abortion President Barack Obama. He has been repeatedly praised by pro-life leaders in and out of Minnesota as someone who has shown true leadership and abortions have dropped in the state of Minnesota because of his efforts.
As president, Governor Pawlenty would be nothing short of a 100% pro-life president who will provide care and concern for women and unborn children.
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