From USFWS and talking points below. Phyllis The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has published the draft Environmental Impact Statement for the Izembek National Wildlife Refuge Proposed Land Exchange/Road Corridor. We will be accepting public comments through May 18, 2012. The draft EIS evaluates a three-party land exchange that would add approximately 56,000 acres to the Izembek and Alaska Peninsula National Wildlife Refuges, designates approximately 43,000 acres of that as wilderness, transfers 1,600 acres of refuge lands on Sitkinak Island to the State of Alaska, and transfers an estimated 200-acre, 9-mile corridor through Izembek Refuge and Izembek Wilderness to the State. The purpose of this land exchange is to allow a road to be constructed between the communities of King Cove and Cold Bay. Copies of the document summary and compact disks of the full document are being mailed to all local area boxholders and those on the project mailing list. Public meetings will be scheduled in Izembek Refuge area communities and Anchorage during the public review period. For more information and to download the DEIS, please go to: http://izembek.fws.gov/eis.htm or contact Stephanie Brady, Project Lead on the Draft EIS at [log in to unmask] or by phone at 907.306.7448. Stephanie Brady U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 907.306.7448 Support a No Action Alternative that preserves the Izembek National Wildlife Refuge Wilderness and its world-class natural resources and to tell decision-makers that it’s in the public interest to protect this national and international treasure. Take this opportunity to oppose a road that would destroy forever the wilderness character of the refuge, remove Wilderness protection, and permanently compromise this fragilelandscape and designated Wetland of International Significance and Important Bird Area. The proposed road would bisect the ecological heart of the Izembek Refuge Wilderness. To comply with a Congressional mandate, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service prepared for public comment an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) on the proposed road through the refuge’s Congressionally-designated Wilderness. The road would be an additional enormous cost to taxpayers and would not meet the stated goal of year-round, reliable transportation access from King Cove to an airport in Cold Bay, Alaska. This problem was solved when $37.5 million in federal tax dollars was given to King Cove for a state-of-the art hovercraft, road improvements and medical facility upgrades, through Senator Stevens’ 1998 King Cove Health & Safety Act. The EIS includes a No Action Alternative, which the Friends and many other organizations support. This approach saves further spending of American taxpayer dollars and protects the natural environment, while saving lives. The No Action Alternative supports resuming operation of the 98-foot hovercraft, which can travel in wave heights up to 10-feet and in winds over 45 miles per hour. It can carry 50 passengers as well as an ambulance and freight. The U.S. taxpayer bought King Cove this vessel in 2008. The $9 million state-of-the-art hovercraft has transported over 30 individuals in a medical emergency with 100% success. Your input is critical; please join us in letting the Fish and Wildlife Service know you support the No Action Alternative. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - To unsubscribe from the IOWA-TOPICS list, send any message to: [log in to unmask] Check out our Listserv Lists support site for more information: http://www.sierraclub.org/lists/faq.asp