Groups pushing for Crater Lake
wilderness area
by ANDREW THEEN Oregonian 11/23/16
Conservation groups are stepping up the
pressure on Oregon’s congressional
delegation to designate more than 500,000
acres of public land, including Crater Lake
National Park, as a federal wilderness area.
Representatives from Oregon Wild and
Environment Oregon on Monday delivered a
petition with 37,000 signatures in support
of the proposal to Sen. Ron Wyden’s office
in Northeast Portland. The Democrat sits on
the Senate’s energy and natural resources
committee.
Several steps are required to achieve
protected wilderness status, and they start
with Congress. The bill, which couldn’t
happen until 2017, would need to pass both
chambers and garner President-elect Donald
Trump’s signature to become law.
If approved, the Crater Lake Wilderness Area
would be the largest in the state and 45th
largest in the country. Oregon has 50
protected wilderness areas spanning more
than 2.9 million acres. Congress last
designated protected wilderness in the state
in 2009, when it approved eight areas,
including the Clackamas Wilderness in the
Mount Hood National Forest.
Wyden said that protecting natural treasures
is a top priority for the Oregonians.
“Continuing to grow our recreation economy
depends on the ability to create new public
recreation areas, as well as to maintain
existing recreation opportunities and public
lands,” he said in a statement. “I’m looking
forward to hearing from Oregonians about
further protections of Crater Lake.”
Sen. Jeff Merkley said through a
spokesperson that he is interested in
“continuing the conversation” on how to
protect Crater Lake for generations to come.
Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Eugene, said he
doesn’t anticipate any discussion on
wilderness this year. Beyond that, it’s
unclear: “Judging from statements by
President-Elect Trump’s transition team and
Republican congressional leadership, I will
be fighting in the coming year to preserve
already-protected areas and attempts to open
sensitive inland and coastal areas from
wholesale leasing and reckless
exploitation,” he said in a statement.
Congress approved the Wilderness Act in
1964, and it was signed by President Lyndon
Johnson to protect lands “where man himself
is a visitor who does not remain.”
Commercial activities, such as logging, are
prohibited in the more than 765 federally
protected wilderness areas.
The proposed Crater Lake wilderness calls
for establishing a 90-mile corridor of the
Cascades — from Mount McLoughlin in Jackson
County to Mount Thielsen and surrounding
areas north of Crater Lake. The area stiches
existing wilderness areas, such as the Sky
Lakes Wilderness surrounding McLoughlin and
the 55,000 acres of protected wilderness
around Mount Thielsen — into one supersized
territory.
Rep. Earl Blumenauer, D-Portland, spoke in
favor of the idea during a small news
conference Monday and delivered the
signatures to his congressional colleague’s
office.
“There is nothing more iconic for Oregon
than Crater Lake,” Blumenauer said of the
state’s only National Park. He called on
Congress to “protect this symbol.”
Tara Brown, wilderness campaign coordinator
at Oregon Wild, said organizers have been
working on the proposal for about four years
and ramped up signature gathering in the
past 12 months.
Brown said it’s important to protect
old-growth forests in the Cascades and the
surrounding landscape as climate change
forces more wildlife to seek shelter in
higher elevations. The more than
500,000-acre coverage area also includes the
headwaters of the Rogue and Umpqua rivers.
“We tried to figure out where the most
road-less areas were, where the best
wildlife habitat was, how we could protect
clean drinking water and just make a long
corridor,” she said.
But the enthusiasm isn’t shared by one of
Oregon’s key officials and a top-ranking
Republican congressman.
Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, is “100
percent opposed” to the proposed wilderness
area, according to his communications
director, Andrew Malcolm.
Walden has met with constituents and elected
officials in the affected area who are
concerned about “restricting the public’s
access to the land, as well as the impact on
forest and fire management in the area.”
New roads and motorized vehicles are
prohibited in wilderness areas, but the
proposal would not affect existing roads
inside the national park or elsewhere.
Recreational hunting, fishing and camping
are allowed in wilderness areas, but some
activities, like cycling are not.
Wyden will approach the proposed wilderness
just as he does other legislation, according
to a spokesperson. “Senator Wyden first goes
through a process of stakeholder outreach,
including holding meetings, to determine a
path forward on any policy affecting
Oregonians. That will be his approach to
this one, as well.”
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