TAKE ACTION:
(From The Wilderness Society)
Forest Service set to auction off energy leases in the Bridger-Teton
National Forest
Help us keep oil roads and oil rigs out of another fragile wildlife haven!
Energy development is now the dominant force in the management of our
western public lands. As federal land managers rush headlong to lease some
of our finest wildlands, they casually ignore all other values: fish and
wildlife habitat, recreation, clean air and water.
The next to fall may be a largely wild but unprotected national forest area
in Wyoming's northwest corner. The Bridger-Teton National Forest is poised
to auction off 175,000 acres to energy exploration companies in the Wyoming
Range, a vital southern leg of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. Nearly
two-thirds of the land is inventoried roadless areas. We need your help to
protect it! Please write the U.S. Forest Service and insist that the agency
keep industry out of this prime wildlife habitat and scenic treasure.
The first of several lease auctions is set for October 5, so please send
your comments by Wednesday, September 15, 2004. You can take immediate
action from: http://ga1.org/campaign/BT_tws/ing6w74a85mmx
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More on the Extraordinary Bridger-Teton National Forest
Few of our national forests are as blessed with natural attributes as the
Bridger-Teton. Its fabled Wind River Range creates one of the most
distinctive geological skylines in the West. Big game in the thousands
migrate through the region, including the very areas now proposed for oil
and gas leasing. Some of these areas are crucial calving grounds for elk.
The proposed lease area, a magnet for hunters and anglers, is a mosaic of
aspen and coniferous forests and open grasslands. The Bridger-Teton forms a
mountainous arc around the northern fringes of the Upper Green River Valley,
a major wildlife area that has become ground zero in the frenzied Rocky
Mountain natural gas rush. Not content with lucrative gas fields such as the
Jonah and Pinedale Anticline, industry wants to tap reserves under the
Wyoming Range to the west of valley. And the Forest Service seems eager to
oblige.
The areas to be leased this fall include 92,000 acres of Inventoried
Roadless Areas that are protected from road building by the Roadless Area
Conservation Rule. A federal judge has blocked implementation of the
Roadless Rule in Wyoming, but conservationists have appealed that decision
to the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals.
Before inviting in the bulldozers, drill rigs, roads, and pipelines, the
Forest Service should consider what will be lost if the tributary watersheds
of the Green, Greys and Hoback rivers become an industrialized gas field.
Millions of Acres Under Lease; Three-quarters Unused!
Now is not the time for the Forest Service to open huge swaths of the
Wyoming Range to energy development. The industry hasn't used 77 percent of
the oil and gas leases it already holds in Wyoming, covering some 15 million
acres as of 2003. There is plenty of land open to development without
destroying the wildflower-filled meadows, old growth forests and streams of
the Wyoming Range.
There are already more than 3,000 natural gas wells on Bureau of Land
Management lands in the Upper Green River Valley. And thousands more are on
the way. In all, 75 percent of the valley is now under lease. Despite this,
the Bridger-Teton National Forest is dead set on leasing a vast sweep of
immediately adjacent national forest land without undertaking a thorough
environmental review, without revising the outdated forest plan and without
public input of any kind.
The Wilderness Society was part of a successful campaign last year to
dissuade Bridger-Teton officials from leasing over 376,000 acres in the
forest's northern reaches. Vociferous public objection kept a vital link
between the Gros Ventre and Bridger Wilderness Areas off the auction block.
But that decision left the door open to industry on 613,000 other acres in
the Wyoming Range, of which this proposed sale is a part. We need your help
to protect those lands!
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Please Contact Your Senators and Representative Today
Now is the time to speak up. This sell-off of our natural heritage starts
October 5, 2004, so there isn't much time. Please take a moment today to
tell the Bridger-Teton National Forest Supervisor that you want the Wyoming
Range kept safe from oil roads and oil rigs! Remind her that the forest's
natural assets far outweigh any oil and gas potential. You can send that
message immediately from
http://ga1.org/campaign/BT_tws/ing6w74a85mmx
Will you consider writing your own letter? Please do. Your own thoughts in
your own words are always the most effective. We've attached a sample letter
below from which you can draw the major points. And please send a copy of
your comments to the Regional Forester.
For more information on the remarkable Upper Green River Valley, and for
photos and maps, go to http://www.uppergreen.org
Contact Information
Forest Supervisor Carole Hamilton
Bridger Teton National Forest
P.O. Box 1888
Jackson, WY 83001
Fax: (307)739-5010
E-mail: [log in to unmask]
Regional Forester Jack Troyer
USDA Forest Service
Intermountain Region
324 25th Street
Ogden, UT 84401
Fax: 801-625-5359
E-mail: [log in to unmask]
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Sample Letter
Dear Supervisor Hamilton:
I am writing to urge you to reconsider your decision to issue oil and gas
leases on the Bridger-Teton National Forest's Wyoming Range. Before you make
a decision with such far-reaching consequences, the National Environmental
Policy Act requires a more thorough and current environmental review than
the 12-year-old review you are relying on here.
The area you propose to lease contains rare natural values far too precious
to be sacrificed for the ephemeral benefits of natural gas production. This
land provides vital big game habitat treasured by all wildlife enthusiasts.
Much of it is untrammeled, wilderness-quality backcountry, a haven both for
solitude-seeking humans and for protected species, such as lynx, wolverine,
gray wolf and grizzly bear. Its streams harbor some of the last populations
of native Colorado River cutthroat trout in Wyoming.
Rampant development on neighboring Bureau of Land Management land in the
Upper Green River Valley has already brought excruciating pressure to bear
on these species. There is no justification for releasing any more of the
Bridger-Teton to the oil and gas industry. That is especially the case in
light of the abundance of undeveloped leases that already exist throughout
Wyoming.
Nearly two-thirds of the land to be leased is without roads, and the
Roadless Area Conservation Rule requires that you keep it that way. You
should take no action to allow road building in these now-roadless areas
while the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals reviews the Wyoming court decision
enjoining the Roadless Rule.
Finally, no new leasing decisions should be made until after the forest
updates its Land and Resource Management Plan. And none should be made until
after you complete a thorough environmental impact statement, such as the
one you completed last year before deciding to withdraw 376,000 acres in the
northern portion of the forest from oil and gas leasing. Thank you for your
consideration.
Sincerely,
(Your name and address)
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