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CA Desert Dwellers Make Pitch To President Obama

Public News Service (CA)
Lori Abbott
July 7th, 2010

Desert-dwellers are making a pitch to President Obama as his "America's Great Outdoors Initiative" listening tour stops in the Golden State this week. They want to stress that the desert has much more to offer than what most people see from their car windows.

Monica Argandona, Southern California Conservation Director for the California Wilderness Coalition, says many people mistakenly think of the desert as a big wasteland.

Letter: CIEDRA will benefit hunters

Idaho Mountain Express (ID)
July 7th, 2010

What brought me to Idaho years ago were its wild animals, wild rivers and especially its wild lands. As a hunter, I marvel at the abundance of game animals and at the beautiful public places to hunt. My favorite places to hunt are where the roads end and the trails begin. Like many Idahoans, I leave my truck (and ATV) behind, grab my bow and head out on foot into the high country.

Sen. Bingaman’s wilderness bill makes the border safer

Nmpolitics.net (NM)
Nick Voges
July 6th, 2010

It has been annoying to watch the preservation of the most diverse and beautiful land in Doña Ana County be hijacked by the canard that our safety and the security along our border with Mexico will be threatened, especially since passage of the Organ Mountains-Desert Peaks Wilderness Act would make our borders safer.

Tester won’t budge on bill’s logging

The Western News (MT)
Brad Fuqua
July 6th, 2010

Sen. Jon Tester isn't giving up any ground on the four provisions he included in the Forest Jobs and Recreation Act. The Montana legislator reiterated last week that logging will not be stripped from the final version of the bill, which he introduced nearly a year ago.

Besides timber, other provisions cover wilderness, recreation and restoration.

"In the end, if we're missing those components, the bill will not move," Tester said during a telephone interview on Thursday. "We need to get it passed. That's why we're working so hard to do it."

Feinstein’s desert bill awaits debate in Senate committee

Desert Dispatch (CA)
Jessica Cejnar
July 5th, 2010

A senate bill that would turn about 940,000 acres along Route 66 east of Ludlow into a national monument is currently being scrutinized in the U.S. Senate's Energy and Natural Resources Committee.

In the meantime, more than 60 elected officials, cities and business leaders have given their endorsement to the California Desert Protection Act, including Barstow Mayor Joe Gomez.

Letter: Federal act will protect many areas in region

Knoxville News Sentinel (TN)
July 5th, 2010

On June 9, Sens. Lamar Alexander and Bob Corker introduced the Tennessee Wilderness Act of 2010. We Tennesseans are fortunate to have senators who value and appreciate our natural heritage and our recreational resources.

Their introduction of the bill is appreciated by everyone who hikes, horseback rides, hunts, fishes and simply enjoys the beautiful natural areas. There will be 19,568 acres of scenic mountain lands protected in six areas, all currently owned by the government and part of the Cherokee National Forest, both north and south of the Smokies.

Letter: Tester’s forest bill a step in the right direction

Helena Independent Republic (MT)
July 5th, 2010

I recently returned from a short vacation, and was disappointed to learn that the Senate Committee on Energy and National Resources charged with marking up Sen. Tester's Forest Jobs and Recreation Act had tried to strip key forest management components from the bill and make it a pure wilderness bill. Many of us who are proponents of more land being protected as designated wilderness might have preferred a "clean" wilderness bill.

Pitkin County, DeGette to talk to Wilderness

Aspen Times (CO)
Janet Urquhart
July 5th, 2010

U.S. Rep. Diana DeGette and a couple of Pitkin County commissioners will saddle up this week to take a look at lands in the Thompson Creek area, outside of Carbondale, that the congresswoman has proposed as Wilderness.

The unusual, horseback site visit is expected to include DeGette and some of her staff, and commissioners Jack Hatfield and George Newman.

Continental shift in thinking

Helena Independent Republic (MT)
Martin J. Kidston
July 4th, 2010

The first time they sat down together, they brought their agendas with them. Their goals were rigid. Gridlock was expected.

As one group member confessed, talking about collaboration is the easy part. When it comes time to actually give something up - to sacrifice something important - collaboration often goes out the door.

Yet the players at the table that day survived the spirited session. By talking things through, the horsemen, mountain bikers and conservationists realized they had more in common than not. Their goals, while slightly different, weren't that far apart.

Opinion: We must save the wild treasures of East Tennessee

Johnson City Press (TN)
Jerry D. Greer
July 4th, 2010

Think of how the forests and mountains of the southern Appalachians shaped the lives of the pioneers who crossed them to settle in places like Johnson City, Kingsport and Bristol. Following trails blazed by Daniel Boone, Henry Johnson came here to found Johnson City in 1856, along the newly laid railroad running from Chattanooga to Bristol.

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