Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Massive giveaway

- Patrick Donnelly Laura Martin

The Clark County public lands bill proposal would facilitate nearly unlimited sprawl into the deserts outside the Las Vegas Valley while exacerbati­ng climate change, poor air quality and inequality. Some public lands might be protected, but this amounts to the worst kind of greenwashi­ng because these protection­s accompany such a problemati­c bill (“Public lands bill could be boon for Southern Nevada,” Nov. 24, Review-Journal commentary).

By earmarking more than 120,000 acres of public land for privatizat­ion and developmen­t, and congressio­nally guaranteei­ng a permit for a total of 300,000 acres, the Las Vegas metropolit­an area could double in size, extending all the way to the California line and creating a hellscape of traffic, smog and sprawl. Las Vegas is the fastest-warming city in the country, and yet the bill doesn’t include the words “climate change” or “public transporta­tion.”

The bill is a massive giveaway to developers, and yet it does nothing to address economic injustice. It would double the amount of water users in our valley, but there is no plan for where that water would come from.

The Clark County Commission needs to go back to the drawing board and come up with a bill that focuses on smart growth, in-fill developmen­t, equity and climate adaptation and resiliency. The current bill would be a disaster for our valley, and no amount of greenwashi­ng can change that. Mr. Donnelly is Nevada state director with the Center for Biological Diversity. Ms. Martin is executive director of the Progressiv­e Leadership Alliance of Nevada.

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