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Skiing in the Schell Creeks, Cameron Johnson 	 The White Pine County Public Conservation, Recreation, and Economic Development Act of 2006 passed in the last few hours of the 109th Congress after being attached to a larger Tax Bill, HR. 6111.  The bill protects over 558,133 acres of Eastern Nevada.  This bill was a tough compromise between many different stake holders throughout the State.  NWP and the rest of the Nevada Wilderness Coalition will continue to advocate for the two areas that receive wilderness designation, Blue Mass/Kern Mtns and the Antelope Range. 

Hikers traversing the Schell Creeks, Ron Hunter

 

 

We applaud Senators Reid and Ensign for the service and dedication to Nevada and her wild places.  We are thrilled with the Senators' decision to keep the South Egan Range in tact and look forward to continuing to work will all interested parties in protecting Nevada's most important wild lands as wilderness.  Please take the time to thank them for all their work on behalf of wilderness by writing them a quick note and thanking them for wilderness in White Pine County.

 

Background:  Since 2001, the Nevada Wilderness Project and our partners in the Nevada Wilderness Coalition have been working to protect wilderness-quality public lands in Eastern Nevada as wilderness.  In 2003, after exhaustive research and fieldwork, our coalition produced a proposal to protect over 3.1 million acres of public lands in Eastern Nevada as wilderness.  Though our organizations strongly believe that public lands legislation should follow ecological rather than county boundaries, Nevada Senators Harry Reid and John Ensign have adopted a county-by-county approach to addressing public lands legislation.  In 2003, it became clear that Congress would focus on a Lincoln County lands bill, and in 2004, the Lincoln County Conservation, Recreation, and Development Act was passed by Congress. 

The Lincoln County bill contained significant wilderness designations for 768,000 acres of lands contained in our Eastern Nevada Proposal.  Some of these areas, like Big Rocks and Mt. Irish, were citizen-proposed BLM lands that Congress formally approved for wilderness designation.  However, many worthy lands were left out of the legislation in neighboring White Pine and Nye Counties.

Since 2004, the Nevada Congressional delegation has been working to craft an omnibus public lands bill for White Pine County.  Our coalition once again responded to the Congressional delegation's county focus by proposing 730,000 acres of wilderness on Forest Service and BLM lands within the county. 

Actions Taken:  For the last five years, the Project and our coalition partners have been working with locals in White Pine County to craft strong wilderness protections for the most threatened public lands in the county.   Meetings with PLUAC, County Commissioners, hunters, ranchers, educators and many other residents happened both in the field and in commission chambers.   In the spring of 2006, the White Pine County Commission recommend approximately 530,000 acres of wilderness for the county.  Though this figure protects many worthy places, and we have welcomed the strong spirit of cooperation shown by stakeholders to the process, we continue to advocate for our entire proposal, as many worthy areas have been left unprotected.  These include portions of the Kern Mountains, the Antelope Range, and the South Egans Wilderness Study Area.

 

 Blue Mass, Pete Dronkers

 

 

Goshute Canyon,  Smith

 


 



 
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