Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

No new ghost towns in Nye County

Don’t endanger Ash Meadows with mining, energy developmen­t

- By Bruce Jabbour Special to the Las Vegas Review-journal Bruce Jabbour, a Republican, represents District 1 on the Nye County Commission.

THERE is a fundamenta­l truth that everyone who lives in dry places must abide by: Our water is our future. In my position, I live and work in full recognitio­n of the reality that all life and prosperity

NEVADA VIEWS

in these desert lands depends on how water, as our most precious resource, is managed and protected.

It is easy to fall prey to the notion that living things could not possibly thrive in a place such as Nye County given its location in one of the warmest and driest regions on the North American continent. But those who live here or spend time exploring this area know better.

Nye County is home to an incredible abundance of life in many forms. Communitie­s in the county such as Tonopah, Beatty, Amargosa Valley, Crystal, Pahrump, Round Mountain, Manhattan, Belmont, Gabbs, Yumba, Duckwater, Current, Sunnyside and Railroad Valley are some of the most unique and storied communitie­s in our state. Residents and tourists alike are attracted to these rural areas and to their surroundin­g lands because of the sense of true freedom, solitude and quietness they offer.

Nye County is also where the Amargosa River begins. Fed by groundwate­r that flows between several interconne­cted basins, the Amargosa provides a substantia­l portion of the county with an essential resource. In the middle of the Amargosa Desert is Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge, a wetland oasis near the town of Amargosa Valley and Death Valley National Park. The refuge is known around Nevada and around the world due to the remarkably rare species of wildlife that live only within its borders.

The communitie­s in this basin and Ash Meadows share in common one vitally important trait: They depend on water for their survival. That is why when I first came to learn of proposed mining activities near the wildlife refuge and the town of Amargosa Valley, I became deeply concerned. Though Nye County is strongly supportive of mining as the cornerston­e of the state’s economy, I and many others feel that mining activities such as those that have been proposed near the wildlife refuge in search of lithium and other rare metals pose too great a risk to water and therefore to life in this area to be allowed.

Frankly, frustratio­n has been building in our communitie­s for more than a decade regarding the potential impacts of renewable energy developmen­t on life here in Nye County. Areas of the county, including the Amargosa Desert and Pahrump Valley, have had a bull’seye painted on them for industrial solar and other energy developmen­t projects.

We have already seen how just a handful of large-scale projects can change the quality of life in our communitie­s as a result of the increased blowing dust and noise and the loss of unobstruct­ed views that has come along with them.

But of gravest concern is what happens if projects are allowed to proceed that will consume or disrupt water that is relied upon by homes, businesses and special desert habitat areas such as those found within Ash Meadows. We in Nye County are eager to sit at the table with the federal managing agencies and our partners in the area to discuss sensible solutions and best practices for determinin­g where these kinds of projects are appropriat­e, and where they are not. We believe our perspectiv­e as residents of this special landscape can be instrument­al in guiding responsibl­e land use and extraction. We feel we must do everything in our power to ensure that no new ghost towns are created in Nye County as a result of the decisions made too hastily and without sufficient considerat­ion and discussion today.

That is why we are calling on our federal land managers and leaders in Congress to work together and with us as residents of the community to develop sensible solutions to our energy issues. This starts with not allowing projects with the clear potential to affect groundwate­r needed by the communitie­s and by places such as Ash Meadows to move forward. Actions need to be considered and taken with the aim of ensuring that life in this basin continues to have the water it needs to thrive well beyond our lifetimes. We look to those charged with the duty of managing these lands to commit to that idea by saving our treasured landscapes such as Ash Meadows from the harms of explorator­y mining on its bordering lands.

I call on our leaders not to let any more towns become ghost towns on their watch.

 ?? Las Vegas Review-journal ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye
Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge in the Amargosa Valley. Rover Metals wants to explore for lithium adjacent to the refuge.
Las Vegas Review-journal Bizuayehu Tesfaye Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge in the Amargosa Valley. Rover Metals wants to explore for lithium adjacent to the refuge.

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