Being "lame" is no excuse PDF Print E-mail
Written by Wild Nevada   
Sunday, 14 November 2010 18:49
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Congress begins its lame duck session, and conservationists are ready for some action. Across the country, there are twenty wilderness bills awaiting passage.

Twenty!

From the spectacular Rocky Mountain high country of Idaho’s Boulder White Clouds to the stunning desert vistas in southern New Mexico’s Dona Ana County and the majestic beauty of the Cherokee National Forest in Tennessee, there remains much to be done before 2010 ends. And counter to most everything we hear about bitter partisanship and division, these bills are sponsored by Republicans and Democrats from both the Senate and the House of Representatives.

Here in Nevada, we have plenty to keep our eyes on.

1. Remember those bills co-introduced over the summer by Sen. Reid and Rep. Heller about a solar royalty? The first was Nevada-specific. It paves the way for two good solar projects to be constructed on public land in Lincoln County, along with the development of a royalty program based on the sale of those projects’ electricity. The royalties would go into a Renewable Energy Mitigation and Fish and Wildlife Fund, then come back to Lincoln County to be used on habitat conservation. Shortly after this one was introduced, a national bill with the same general goals followed. When passed, these will be huge accomplishments in our drive to support “smart from the start” renewable energy development. We will have developed renewable energy. We will have accomplished conservation. And we will have done both at the same time.

2. Gold Butte National Conservation Area and Wilderness. No bill was introduced for this area during the regular session, despite ten years of collaboration, compromise and solid campaigning. But we are undeterred! There has been an unbelievably huge groundswell of support over the summer months, and throughout the lame duck session we will continue to say to Senator Reid, Representative Titus and their staff people: the time is now for Gold Butte. We know this is true—and so do many of you who sent letters to your representatives, wrote e-mails, signed postcards, attended meetings and wrote letters to the editor. We’re optimistic.

This is always an exciting, unpredictable and wild time in our nation’s politics. Many conservationists will be minding the 11th-hour work of the 111th Congress as closely as anyone—and that includes us. We’ll do our best to keep you posted.


 
scratch 'n sniff PDF Print E-mail
Written by Wild Nevada   
Thursday, 11 November 2010 15:13
sagehandsblog
Here at the Nevada Wilderness Project world headquarters, we've always joked about wanting to make a scratch 'n sniff newsletter. You know, where you scratch the surface of the paper and up wafts the smell of roses, fresh baked cookies, a wet desert bighorn sheep... any number of things.

Well, last week we came as close as we probably ever will to creating a scratch 'n sniff publication... by placing a small sprig of sage in letters going out to NWP members. The letters are an appeal for year-end donations, and we figured we'd send along a little whiff of Nevada to inspire people to act. Not everyone will receive a letter--it's getting expensive to raise funds that way. That's why we also sent out an e-mail today with a similar request for donations.

Please make a donation online to the Nevada Wilderness Project.
You can do it securely here: www.wildnevada.org

Imagine the smell of sage (or something else you love from the great outdoors) and think about this: The Nevada Wilderness Project was started 11 years ago to shine a bright light on Nevada's wilderness resources, develop robust and effective campaigns for their legislative protection, and to help build a more effective Nevada environmental community.

Because of your support and hard work over the last decade, more than 2.5 million acres of wilderness has been protected in Nevada, along with another 500,000 acres of national conservation area. This is more protected land than in any other state during the same time.  And you know--even without a real scratch 'n sniff--that when you give to the Nevada Wilderness Project, you are supporting a conservation organization that ranks, pound-for-pound, as one of the most effective and efficient conservation organizations in the country.

 
Instructions for today: PDF Print E-mail
Written by Wild Nevada   
Tuesday, 02 November 2010 08:59
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vote_environment

 
Vote Tomorrow: Tuesday, Nov. 2 PDF Print E-mail
Written by Wild Nevada   
Monday, 01 November 2010 08:36
voteenvironment

Tomorrow is election day.  Get out there and vote.  And to further inspire you, the Nevada Wilderness Project offers you this link to an article by Yvon Chouinard, the founder and owner of Patagonia, Inc.  It's a great essay making a coherent, logical case not for a particular candidate or party--but for a way of thinking.  It reads, in part, "the health of our environment never makes it to the top list of voter concerns. But it has everything to do with all the major issues our elected officials face. Everything we make ultimately comes from the ground, or what’s beneath it, or from our common waters. Every job and every economy depends ultimately on the health of the natural world of which we’re a part."

Check out the whole essay here. It includes a link to an interesting piece by Tom Brokaw, as well as to the League of Conservation Voters site and environmental scorecard for candidates.

 
NWP finds proof that climate change is real PDF Print E-mail
Written by Wild Nevada   
Wednesday, 27 October 2010 07:22
The assault on reason and science has intensified in America in the last decade. You can develop this thesis around the writings of this guy and this guy. Or you could just infer we’re willfully stupid because of this magnificent testimony to the rigor of scientific thought practiced by creationist Ken Ham.

Here at NWP, our scientists have broken through with conclusive proof that climate change is real.

The inarguable fact that climate change is real and has the power to profoundly affect the way we live our lives is not:

  • Evident in the severe heat waves, or the dramatic fire and drought cycles wreaking havoc across the world.
  • It is not proven by global photographic evidence.
  • Nor is it proven by the plight of the polar bear.

No, the ultimate scientific proof that climate change is real and will cause all sorts of things we’ve never seen before is…  here:



 
Home Ground: Language for an American Landscape PDF Print E-mail
Written by Wild Nevada   
Wednesday, 13 October 2010 08:02
home_groundThe Nevada Wilderness Project’s main office is in Reno. This is where two-thirds of our staff work, and where the regular mail comes in… correspondence, bills, donations, and the occasional interesting package. Not long ago, we received a package from Trinity University Press containing a new book published over the summer entitled Home Ground: Language for an American Landscape.

It is a collection of more that 850 landscape terms arranged alphabetically and defined by some of the nation’s finest writers – and edited by Barry Lopez and Debra Gwartney. It’s a neat book. It rests on the premise that in order to protect the environment and to encourage others to protect it, we must be familiar with our surroundings and know how to describe them and occasionally, know a story or two behind a unique landscape term.

For example, here in Nevada we have hoodoos, seif dunes and, of course, a little 200,000 square-mile closed basin we call the Great Basin. “Hoodoo,” Home Ground tells us, is a term that dates at least to the mid-nineteenth century. Hoodoos are “fantastically shaped stoned pillars in deserts... formed by sporadic, intensive rainfall erosion of steeply sloped but horizontally layered sedimentary rock, leaving freestanding pinnacles.” In Reno, hoodoos inspired musicians in a bluegrass band to call themselves the Hoodoo Voodoo Revue.

Nevada’s landscape is dotted with seif dunes, sand dunes that form in ridges parallel to one another and to the direction of the wind, so the prevailing wind sweeps through the troughs between them. “Seyf” is “sword” in Arabic. Sand Mountain, just east of Fallon on Highway 50, is an example. A favorite destination for off-roaders, Sand Mountain is also called a “singing” dune because sand falling from the dune’s crest produces a loud and sometimes eerie sound.

D.J. Waldie, writing in Home Ground, says “all of these sounds are caused by an incompletely understood interaction of wind, humidity and the geometry of individual grains when a sheet of sand with the right properties slumps from a dune’s crest.” We’ve seen other seif dunes in the heart of the Desert Wildlife Refuge.

And that’s only two out of an astonishing 850 terms describing natural features all over North America—all gracefully defined by great writers such as Barbara Kingsolver, Linda Hogan, Robert Haas and Bill McKibben, to name a few.

If you live in Reno, we recommend you get a copy at Sundance Bookstore, our local independent bookstore on West Fourth Street.

Home Ground: Language for an American Landscape
Edited by Barry Lopez and Debra Gwartney
Trinity University Press
465 pages

 
Attending the Desert Conference, and what lies ahead PDF Print E-mail
Written by Wild Nevada   
Wednesday, 29 September 2010 08:25
desertconferenceimageLast weekend, three staff members of the Nevada Wilderness Project attended the Desert Conference near Antelope, Oregon – hosted by our colleagues at the Oregon Natural Desert Association (ONDA). The conference was an opportunity to connect with our counterparts in Oregon and hold some in-depth, in-person conversations about issues affecting vast areas of shared sagebrush habitat along the border of our two states.

We stayed at the Washington Young Life Christian Camp near Antelope, Oregon (zip-lining into a muddy pond at night has never been more fun), where we listened to talks about public lands restoration opportunities, steelhead and salmon conservation, different perspectives on saving the sagebrush sea, and a 10-year retrospective of the National Landscape Conservation System.

Highlights included an evening talk by author Craig Childs, who showed slides and told us incredible stories about walking through the world’s deserts – under the title of “The Shape of Water: Exploring a Key Element in World Deserts.”

That’s right, the shape of water. In deserts. Childs was amazing.

We also heard from accomplished conservationist Edward M. Norton Sr., who told us of his experiences with conservation work in China and other parts of Asia. These experiences, he explained, have made him view our U.S. land management agencies in a better light. He’s even a little bit proud of agencies like the BLM and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service – not for their efficiency, but for their accessibility. “I don’t care whether the BLM has a soul or not,” he said. “…they are not corrupt, and that means everything.”

We’re excited about the habitat, wildlife and landscapes around the Nevada-Oregon state line. Next week, some of us from NWP and two volunteer interns from Patagonia are returning to the area -- this time to explore the Hart National WIldlife Refuge, Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge and the miles of wildlands that lie between them. We'll let you know what we see and how conservation opportunities for this vast and important habitat shape up.

 
NWP has been audited PDF Print E-mail
Written by Wild Nevada   
Monday, 09 August 2010 10:38
housewithunderwear(Denise Barclay, NWP's Director of Administrative Functions, penned this post)

I know… for most of us, the word "audit" can strike terror in our hearts. But in NWP’s case, it’s a good thing (and something we asked for!)

When a non-profit organization is successful in raising money for its conservation programs, as NWP has been since it was founded 11 years ago, contributing foundations and donors want to make sure that their grant money is being used properly. And that’s what audits help reveal. And as individual supporters and donors to NWP, we thought you might be interested too. So we opened up the bookkeeping and administrative procedures to the scrutiny of Kohn Colodny’s CPAs.

We use the word transparency a lot in reference to our government and think it is a very good idea, and as it is with most things in life, the concept is quite different than the reality. I am the bookkeeper and Director of Administrative Functions at NWP and was the lead person throughout the audit. At times it felt a lot like opening up one’s underwear drawer to a complete stranger. There for them to peruse were not only my nice undergarments, but also the holey and tattered ones. They were quite thorough in their sifting through every area, making sure that everything was accountable and that all the t’s were crossed and the i’s dotted.

The CPAs I worked with said that it was refreshing to work with people who were not defensive when asked to present documents and explanations about a procedure. Yes, they found some areas that could use some improvement and a handful of mistakes, but they were impressed with the level of organization and fiscal responsibility that NWP already had in place. Maybe most important—though no surprise to me--they found no evidence of fraud or mismanagement.

I found them to be quite helpful in suggesting ways to make NWP run more efficiently. After all, isn’t that the point of transparency, to learn what’s working and what’s not?

If you have questions about our audit process, feel free to e-mail me. Our IRS Form 990 is available on request.


 
Reviewing the nitty-gritty PDF Print E-mail
Written by Wild Nevada   
Friday, 06 August 2010 11:27
pileofpaperWide open skies. Camping under the stars. Glimpses of wild animals… This is the part of conservation work we all love. Reviewing government documents? – not so much. But it is hugely important to successful outcomes for habitat conservation, and it's part of the job we take seriously.

The Nevada Wilderness Project (NWP) reviews a variety of federal documents about activities proposed on Nevada public lands. Recently, we reviewed and provided written comments on the Draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) Bridgeport Travel Management Plan for all roads on national forest lands in Lyon, Mineral and Douglas Counties.

This document and planning effort was in response to fundamental changes being undertaken by the Forest Service to control a proliferation of unauthorized routes in these areas - and to best manage a travel system by designating legal roads, trails and areas for motor vehicle use. Roads impact wildlife and habitat. That’s why we pay close attention to where they are, whether or not they are legal or illegal, and how they are managed.

The Forest Service’s Bridgeport District office published a map of the district and solicited comments from the public about either opening or closing roads and trails that were in use within the district. NWP’s comments focused on providing suggestions for road and trail restrictions that would protect wildlife, important wildlife habitat, and Native American cultural resources within the Nevada portion of the Bridgeport Ranger District.

The Forest Service then modified the proposed action based on comments received from the public, including those from us. Their final decision ultimately resulted in the seasonal closures of some areas in order to protect sage grouse and mule deer during critical months of the year. All unauthorized cross-country motorized use was closed throughout the District. The Forest Service eliminated 10 routes in the district that would result in negative impacts to biological and cultural resources, and they said no to an 85-acre area being proposed for a cross-country motorized area based on the public’s comments that certain sensitive plants and other significant resources were present on the proposed site, and would be negatively impacted.

While this story isn’t about rousing speeches or a dramatic 11th-hour “rescue” of habitat, it is about the real work of making progress for conservation. More often than not, real gains are made by reading government planning documents, deciphering what they will mean on the ground, and by vigorously participating in these agency-public land management processes. All in the name of doing what we passionately believe is best for our public wildlands.

For more information regarding the Record of Decision for the Bridgeport Travel Management Project, you can download a pdf here: http://www.fs.fed.us/r4/htnf/projects/bridgeport/feis/2_btm_record_of_decision.pdf

 
NWP at the Outdoor Retailer Summer Market Trade Show PDF Print E-mail
Written by Wild Nevada   
Thursday, 05 August 2010 13:23
This week two of us from the Nevada Wilderness Project have been in Salt Lake City at the Outdoor Retailer Summer Market show (OR Show) to campaign on behalf of Gold Butte, NV. The OR Show brings together everyone who works in the outdoor industry, from the fabric makers and designers of those high-tech jackets to company reps who buy and sell everything that is used in outdoor sports and recreation. It is a beehive of activity and business. We go to talk about our work in conservation.

The outdoor industry, particularly members of the Conservation Alliance, are committed to groups like ours and to helping protect spectacular, open spaces to recreate in and enjoy. They recognize that conserving these wild places makes business sense; having wildlands to recreate in is essential for their customer base. Member companies like REI, Patagonia, The North Face and Black Diamond all work with the Conservation Alliance to distribute grants to grassroots conservation groups like NWP.

Yesterday, the Conservation Alliance held a “Keep it Wild” event in which we were one of eight organizations invited to pair up with a company to ask the OR Show attendees to take action. NWP was hosted in the Horny Toad Clothing Company's booth, and we asked people to support our work in Gold Butte. We collected 250 postcards signed by attendees to give to Congresswoman Dina Titus letting her know that the outdoor industry cares about protecting Gold Butte, too.

After talking to people all day about the uniqueness of Gold Butte, NWP's Development Director Mackenzie Banta headed over to the Keen Footwear booth to give a quick presentation about Gold Butte to the crowd. It is heartening to talk with people involved in this multi-billion-dollar industry and listen to them talk about their passion for wildlands and the outdoors. They care just as much about conserving the stunning lands in Nevada as we do…

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Why Devin is in Nevada for the summer PDF Print E-mail
Written by Wild Nevada   
Monday, 28 June 2010 09:56
Ever since NWP was founded in 1999, we’ve taken pride in producing top-notch maps. And they have been—and will continue to be—essential tools for getting our work done. With the help of software grants from ESRI and acquisition of a large-format printer through the aid of the Norcross Foundation, we routinely produce and share high quality, “industry-standard” maps with our Congressional representatives, partner organizations in Nevada, national conservation groups, government agencies and private industry. And this summer, we’re fortunate to have an intern with great skills—and the willingness to put them to use (over and over and over again) in a way that will allow us to be more efficient for years to come. Here's his story.

My name is Devin Creighton, and I am currently a senior at a university far removed from the landscapes and wilderness here in beautiful Nevada. I have been studying towards two bachelor's degrees at the Indiana University of Pennsylvania, located about an hour’s drive northeast of Pittsburgh in southwestern Pennsylvania. My studies are in Environmental Geography and Geographic Information Systems (GIS). A geographical information system captures, stores, analyzes, manages, and presents data that are linked to location. In the simplest terms, GIS is the merging of cartography and database technology. GIS applications are tools that allow users to create interactive queries (user-created searches), analyze spatial information, edit data, maps, and present the results.

As a student nearing the end of my college career, it became apparent that it was time to start applying my studies and start trying to find work in my chosen fields. So to get started, I began my quest for an internship. For weeks, I searched the web as well as contacts that my professors and fellow students recommended and had had success with in the past. After sending out several resumes and interviewing over the phone, I soon found in my local area that many internships had been developed into full-time positions, or organizations simply couldn’t afford to fund them in today’s economic climate.

Through the word of my older brother, who’s employed by Patagonia in Reno, I learned of the Nevada Wilderness Project, which is similar to many organizations I had been trying to get involved with at home. I checked out their website and came to realize, what better opportunity could there be to put my education to use--as well as experience a new landscape? So as an intern here at NWP, I get to witness first-hand the effort and thought that goes into preserving pristine areas and habitats as well as into the advocacy for “smart from the start” development of renewable energy. All of these are issues that interest me, and in the future, I would like to work in the areas of preservation and development.

I have been using the skills I acquired through my coursework in GIS to help the friendly folks here at NWP make their map-making efforts simpler and more efficient by revising a huge document pertaining to the roads of the state of Nevada. Many different government agencies, such as the Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Forest Service, offer portions of this data to the public for download. But none of these agencies offer a complete and thorough collection of this information for the entire state. The project I am currently immersed in involves combining this information from different sources and attributing it relative to its primary use (Primary Highways, Paved Roads, Trails, 4WD access, Private Roads, and etc).

And why does a wilderness group need accurate and easily accessible road information? Upon the completion of this huge task, it will greatly reduce the amount of time needed for the production of maps that will be used in current and future conservation proposals. Roads are often necessary on these maps to give reference to where an area is located or to the amount of traffic that an area is subject to. They are often barriers or pose threats to many kinds of wildlife because of the affects they can have on the natural residents of a delicate landscape. This is an important factor to include and consider in proposals for conservation or preservation of critical habitats.

All of the different elements I have and will witness throughout the duration of my internship stay here at the NWP are extremely helpful and important to the growth of my knowledge about what goes on in the field, and into the efforts that go into the protection of an area. I am also learning more about the application, practice, knowledge and familiarity with GIS software and its application in the workplace. It is a great pleasure to have the opportunity to work with such an easy going, well-rounded group of people on a daily basis.

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