I guess it's
the US Senate's turn this week to introduce new bills to create more
designated wilderness. It’s as if the
current 106 million plus acres of locked up designated wilderness, where
multiple-use and forest management practices are virtually non-existent, aren’t
enough. The two bills introduced in the Senate this week (refer to the two
press release links below) contain another 517,000 acres of new
wilderness in
http://www.snowmobile-alliance.org/uploads/SAWS_Action_Alert_-_Owyhee_Initiative_Idaho.htm
http://crapo.senate.gov/media/newsreleases/release_full.cfm?id=261185
http://reid.senate.gov/newsroom/record.cfm?id=260601
Last week
the US House passed three wilderness bills that affect
http://www.forbes.com/entrepreneurs/feeds/ap/2006/07/24/ap2900754.html
And speaking
of degraded, have you been following the recent news reports related to forest
fires in the western
You may also
wish to take a look at just how much land is lost to forest fires on a yearly
basis and then decide if it is wise to continue to lock up more and more land
each year as wilderness or RWAs. Are we really “protecting” our forests for
“future generations”? How is not managing our forests providing some
unknown source of protection when millions of acres of these forests are
dying from insect infestations and are then allowed to burn to the ground?
This year is already turning out to be a record year for fire damage
forests with 5,696,882 acres burned, and we still have a solid two months
left of mostly hot and dry weather in the west creating prime fire conditions.
In the previous 5 years there were 18.5 million acres burned due to forest
fires. It seems to me that what our forests need most is more “hands on” forest
management and a lot less “hands off” non-management. To see what is currently
burning or has already burned in your backyard or in your nearest national
forest, refer to the following National Fire News link.
http://www.nifc.gov/fireinfo/nfn.html
Jack Ward
Thomas, former Forest
Service Chief, recently wrote an article titled Sustaining Forests, which, while maintaining that we need to
actively manage our forests, never once makes mention of the word “wilderness”. Mr. Thomas states “With human populations increasingly ensconced in forested areas,
forest health already degraded, and the ability to use controlled burns
limited, "hands off" management — even for public lands — seems
untenable in the long run”. One can ascertain from the article that Mr.
Thomas agrees that only further devastation will occur with locking up more
national forests as designated wilderness. Below I have provided a link to his
article published in the Sacramento Bee.
http://www.sacbee.com/content/opinion/story/14276666p-15085993c.html
The spin
that the extreme green organizations and many of the mainstream media apply to
the never ending march for more and more designated wilderness, until they
finally reach their desired dream of the
Snowmobile Alliance of Western States
Protecting the right to ride for the owners of 303,604 registered
snowmobiles (2005) in the western
Copyright © 2006 Snowmobile
Permission is granted to distribute this
information in whole or in part, as long as Snowmobile Alliance of Western
States (
http://www.snowmobile-alliance.org