Marin Independent Journal

House wilderness protection bill covers 535,000 acres in California

- By Paul Rogers

The U.S. House of Representa­tives on Friday passed a far-reaching bill to provide new wilderness protection­s to 1.5 million acres of federal lands — 535,000 acres of which are in California, an area roughly 18 times the size of the city of San Francisco.

The measure also would ban mining around the Grand Canyon and set aside more than 1,000 miles of rivers in California and other Western states from dams and other developmen­t.

Approved by the Democratic majority on a 227-200 vote, the bill would be the largest wilderness preservati­on legislatio­n in 12 years. That is when President Obama signed The Omnibus Public Land Management Act of 2009, which set aside 2.1 million acres of federal land as wilderness. To become law, it still must pass the U.S. Senate. President Biden has said he will sign it if it reaches his desk.

Among the areas slated for new wilderness protection­s in California are federally owned lands in Redwood National Park, and along the Eel and Trinity rivers in Northern California, the Carrizo Plain in central California, and the San Gabriel Mountains in Southern California.

“Over the past year with lockdowns and isolation we have seen how important getting outside has been for our well-being,” said Rep. Jared Huffman, D-San Rafael, one of the bill’s sponsors. “We all depend on the ecological, economic and mental health benefits that our public lands provide.”

Under the Wilderness Act of 1964, a landmark environmen­tal law signed by President Lyndon Johnson, new logging, mining, road building, oil and gas drilling and other developmen­t is prohibited on federally owned like national forests, national parks and Bureau of Land Management preserves that are designated as wilderness areas.

The act describes wilderness as “an area where the Earth and its community of life are untrammele­d by man, where man himself is a visitor who does not remain.” Wilderness designatio­n is the highest level of protection on federal lands. Overall, the federal government owns about 28% of all 2.3 billion acres that make up the United States, and of that federal land, 109 million acres is designated as wilderness, or about 5% of the entire country.

Critics of Friday’s bill said it would limit economic activity. Many asserted that the federal government already owns too much land.

“Everything we enjoy on this planet is either grown or mined,” said Rep. Tom McClintock, R-Roseville. “And fortunatel­y nature has given us a super abundance of resources and left it to us to responsibl­y reap and to manage this bounty. But it is precisely these resources that the Left has waged war against for an entire generation. The very things that make us prosperous and comfortabl­e are the things the Left attempts to place off limits.”

The bill, known formally as the Protecting America’s Wilderness and Public Lands Act, still must pass the U.S. Senate, where Democrats hold a very narrow majority due to the ability of Vice President Kamala Harris to break ties.

Supporters say its language may have to be added to a larger bill, like President Biden’s proposed proposed infrastruc­ture plan, or a budget bill at the end of the year, to overcome a possible Republican filibuster that would otherwise require at least 60 votes for passage.

For now, environmen­tal groups are celebratin­g. They said the bill would expand tourism, recreation and fish and wildlife.

 ?? COURTESY OF JEFF MORRIS ?? U.S. Forest Service lands along the South Fork Trinity River in Trinity County would be designated as federally protected wilderness under a bill passed Friday by the House of Representa­tives. The area, in the Shasta-Trinity National Forest, is home to Chinook salmon, steelhead trout, bald eagles and other wildlife.
COURTESY OF JEFF MORRIS U.S. Forest Service lands along the South Fork Trinity River in Trinity County would be designated as federally protected wilderness under a bill passed Friday by the House of Representa­tives. The area, in the Shasta-Trinity National Forest, is home to Chinook salmon, steelhead trout, bald eagles and other wildlife.

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