During the “lame
duck” session of the
111th
Congress, Democratic
members of the U.S.
Senate had their
sights set on
passing yet another
omnibus public lands
bill to designate
thousands of acres
of wilderness and
enact other
restrictions on
federal land-use.
Thankfully, this
effort was met with
strong resistance by
Senate conservatives
and was quickly
dropped before
Congress adjourned
on December 22nd.
However, in what
appears to be a
consolation prize to
the environmental
activist community
and its supporters,
upon Congress’
adjournment
Department of the
Interior Secretary
Salazar released
Secretarial Order
#3310, which
instructs the
federal Bureau of
Land Management (BLM)
to identify and
designate BLM lands
with wilderness
characteristics as
“Wild Lands.”
By designating “Wild
Lands” through
land-use planning,
this order
represents a
deliberate end-run
around the authority
of Congress to
designate lands as
wilderness. While I
have long opposed
wilderness
designations under
any circumstances
due to their extreme
restrictions on
beneficial and
economic use of our
federal lands, as
well as the
management
restrictions that
inhibit local
efforts to address
the growing threat
of wildfires, I also
believe that those
decisions are best
made through open
debate and a vote by
the Congress instead
of through a
backdoor process
that is solely at
the discretion of a
federal agency.
Moreover, as the
Obama Administration
continues to claim
that it has no plans
to designate
national monuments
in response to a
leaked memo describing
potential monument
sites (including two
within our Northern
California
Congressional
District), this
latest action
further undermines
their credibility.
Instead, these
statements simply
reinforce the
Administration’s
“lock it up” agenda
with respect to
multiple-use of
federal lands. As
the 112th
Congress convenes
with an emboldened
conservative
majority, I will
pursue whatever
means possible to
prevent this
Secretarial Order or
any other policy
from further
restricting
recreation, forest
management, mining,
grazing, and other
valuable uses of our
public lands in
Northern California.