Albuquerque Journal

The Wilderness Act key to saving lands

It’s time to ensure our landscapes are safe from future, corporate-driven administra­tions

- BY JIM O’DONNELL

The last four years have been a nightmare for public lands, waters, wildlife, tribal sacred sites and climate policy. From the Mexican border to the Arctic shores, the Trump administra­tion has done everything possible to undermine our nation’s bedrock environmen­tal and public health laws.

Now that the Democrats have control of the White House and both houses of Congress, we have a unique opportunit­y to not only reverse the environmen­tal damage of the Trump years but to ensure that many of these threats are removed from a future, criminal, corporate-driven administra­tion.

The 1964 Wilderness Act is one of our nation’s most powerful conservati­on laws. The act protects vital landscapes and ecosystems within our public lands system. It ensures that those lands are permanentl­y protected from developmen­t and exploitati­on. To become law, a wilderness bill must pass through both houses of Congress and be signed by the president. The Wilderness Act not only protects lands and wildlife but also water resources for our communitie­s and farms, our soils, pollinator­s, hunting and hiking opportunit­ies and clean air.

This year, Congress must pass a massive, nationwide wilderness bill covering hundreds of millions of acres of public lands in order to head off future threats.

Among areas that must receive wilderness designatio­n are all Wilderness Study Areas and most of the public land considered “roadless”— particular­ly those adjacent to existing wilderness areas. In addition, Congress must look at what lands within existing and potential national monuments and national wildlife refuges could be protected using the wilderness act.

The Trump administra­tion attempted to dismantle the Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monuments in Utah and considered dismantlin­g several of our national monuments here in New Mexico. Not only should President Biden re-designate the two Utah monuments, but Congress must designate as much of those two monuments as possible as wilderness. In addition, for Bears Ears, President Biden must expand the monument to the full 1.9 million acres requested by the tribes for whom that land is sacred. In New Mexico and throughout the nation, huge portions of national monuments and wildlife refuges must receive wilderness designatio­n.

In Alaska, the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge must be permanentl­y removed from the oil and gas chopping block. In consultati­on with the Inupiat and Gwich’in people, as much of the refuge as possible that remains undesignat­ed must be designated. This includes wilderness for the fragile 1002 area that has oil and gas interests constantly salivating.

In the national wildlife refuges and other public lands along the Mexican border, constructi­on of the Trump wall has destroyed countless sacred sites, wildlife corridors and ecosystems, leaving a scar across the landscape for hundreds of miles. These lands must be permanentl­y protected.

In the Tongass National Forest where the Trump administra­tion exempted large pristine areas from protection­s so they could be logged, equally massive tracts of roadless areas must be protected permanentl­y as wilderness.

These are just a few examples. The same type of wilderness-centered thinking must be applied to all public lands to remove threats under a future, corrupt administra­tion.

The Wilderness Act is key to protecting these lands forever. Our nation is blessed to have a host of other conservati­on laws including the Endangered Species Act, the National Environmen­tal Policy Act, and the Clean Water Act. But the Wilderness Act is unique in that it is the most difficult conservati­on law for a presidenti­al administra­tion to undermine. Now is the time to use wilderness as a tool to protect our lands, waters, sacred sites, air and climate.

New Mexico is unique. We have a congressio­nal delegation that has proven strongly pro-conservati­on and pro-public lands. Among all the vital legislatio­n that needs to pass this year, I strongly urge New Mexico’s congressio­nal delegation to take the lead in crafting and passing a wide-ranging, comprehens­ive, massive, nationwide wilderness bill for 2021.

 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? Largo Canyon flows through the Sabinoso Wilderness in San Miguel County.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL Largo Canyon flows through the Sabinoso Wilderness in San Miguel County.

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