Supporters of the Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act noted that the bill only affects public lands and said it would protect vital wildlife corridors in the West. They considered it a victory simply that a hearing took place on the bill, which has been reintroduced every year since 1993.
Opponents said the bill would not allow for local input on the areas designated and that it would be a top-down federal mandate. No House members from affected districts support the legislation, opponents told a subpanel of the House Natural Resources Committee.
The act would designate as
awilderness nearly 7 million acres in Montana, 9.5 million
acres in Idaho, 5 million acres in Wyoming, 750,000 acres
in eastern Oregon and 500,000 acres in eastern Washington.
Included in those totals is more than 3 million acres in
Yellowstone, Glacier and Grand Teton national parks.
The bill's two main sponsors, Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y.,
and Rep. Christopher Shays, R-Conn., testified first.
Maloney noted that the bill has 115 co-sponsors in both
parties from 35 different states. She also said hundreds
of grassroots organizations, environmental groups and
businesses in the West support it.
“It has deep and strong support from residents in the
affected areas,” she testified.
Maloney emphasized that the bill would not affect private
land and said it would protect an entire functioning
ecosystem. She also said it would create jobs by employing
more than 2,000 workers to restore areas damaged by road
building or logging.
She said accusations that the bill takes a top-down
approach “could not be further from the truth.” She said
local scientists, economists and activists in the affected
states helped write the bill, but could not find any of
their own legislators with enough vision to introduce it,
so sought other lawmakers to do so.
The bill “would not be here today except for local
leaders,” she said.
Shays said the debate should be on the bill itself and not
on the motives of the East Coast lawmakers who sponsored
it. He noted that the lands are owned by all Americans,
not just those living next door.
“Why would I care about the Northern Rockies living in
Connecticut?” Shays asked. “For the same reasons Teddy
Roosevelt cared, living in New York state.”
Rep. Denny Rehberg, R-Mont., testified against the bill,
saying a blanket wilderness designation is a “truly bad
way” of managing land. He said he received more than 7,000
petitions from Montanans about the bill in one week and
that 96 percent opposed it.
Rehberg said sound land management decisions are best
achieved through cooperation on the local level, citing
the Blackfoot Challenge and the Beaverhead-Deerlodge
Partnership as the right way to designate wilderness.
“Unfortunately, the (act) threatens the Montana way of
making land management decisions and has the potential to
stop these collaborative partnerships in their tracks,” he
said. “It's not the way folks do business in the West.”
He said he would defer to Maloney on what should be done
with ground zero in New York and that he hoped she would
“accord me the same respect” about Western lands.
Maloney said she wants to work to achieve more public
access to the lands.
Officials from the Agriculture and Interior departments
also testified in opposition to the bill - which they said
would not allow public involvement in land management
decisions.
Wilderness designation would reduce their ability to
pre-treat forests to reduce wildfire risks, they said. And
some areas in the bill already have been leased for energy
development, they said, which would create conflicts.
Singer Carole King, who lives in Idaho, and officials from
several conservation groups testified for the bill. King
said no one attacks the science or the economics behind
the bill, but that opponents complain instead about a
top-down approach and Easterners telling Westerners what
to do. But it takes national legislation to accomplish
national goals, she said, and the bill must address the
entire ecosystem.
“It's not about political boundaries; it's about science,”
she said. “This is an ecosystem bill.”
Bruce Vincent of Libby, executive director of Communities
for a Great Northwest, and Noel Williams of the Montana
Coalition of Forest Counties opposed the bill. Vincent
said the bill would act like a “Scud missile” coming down
on the table where local leaders work to find consensus on
managing lands and that areas would lose jobs because of
reduced logging and recreation. Williams said local voices
should be given the most weight in land policy decisions.
Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., also opposes the legislation as
a top-down approach.