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Thread: 20,000 acres of the Uintas opened to oil and gas drilling

  1. #1
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    20,000 acres of the Uintas opened to oil and gas drilling

    Utah folks,

    Any opinions on roadless areas in the Unitas being opened up to oil and gas drilling?

    Apparently, some greenies, including Black Diamond Equipment, have formally requested that Regional Forester Jack G. Troyer withdraw his consent for the U.S. Bureau of Land Management to offer for sale 9 oil and gas lease parcels in Uinta National Forest. The proposed leasing would convey oil and gas development rights affecting sensitive environments in the Uinta National Forest. Almost 17,000 of the approximately 20,000 acres in these leases are located in the Diamond Fork and Tie Fork Roadless Areas. And, supposedly, development in these areas poses numerous threats to populations of Bonneville cutthroat Trout; habitat for numerous threatened, endangered and sensitive species including the northern goshawk, Colorado River cutthroat trout, and Canada lynx; and popular areas for hiking, hunting and fishing.

    This is what Black Diamond and the rest of the eco terrorist have to say about the affair:
    Salt Lake City, UT -- A coalition of conservation and outdoor industry groups has formally asked the Forest Service to withdraw plans to lease over 20,000 acres for oil and gas drilling in Utah’s Uinta National Forest. The leasing would allow industrial development in roadless areas along the Wasatch Front that provide valuable opportunities for hiking, fishing, and hunting, as well as habitat for wildlife such as the Bonneville cutthroat trout and northern goshawk. The groups sent a letter to the Forest Service yesterday asking the agency to withdraw its consent to leasing based on violations of federal environmental laws.
    Earthjustice submitted the request on behalf of the Wasatch Mountain Club, Black Diamond Equipment, the Natural Resources Defense Council, Utah Chapter of the Sierra Club, The Wilderness Society, and Trout Unlimited.
    The Forest Service has authorized the Bureau of Land Management to auction mineral leases on over 20,000 acres of Uinta National Forest lands on December 10, 2004. The areas to be leased include almost 17,000 acres of the Diamond Fork and Tie Fork roadless areas that provide habitat for numerous wildlife species ranging from elk to bald eagles, and offer outstanding opportunities for hunting, fishing, hiking, and other outdoor activities.
    This is in addition to the almost 120,000 acres of leases that BLM sold nearby in the Uinta National Forest in September of this year. Yet the Forest Service has decided to allow the leasing of this vast swath of national forest lands without undertaking the thorough environmental reviews of the impacts of the subsequent oil and gas development on wildlife, water, and outdoor recreation that it said it would do in its 2003 forest plan.
    “When the Forest Service revised the Uinta Forest Plan in 2003, it recognized that these roadless areas provide crucial wildlife habitat and valuable recreational opportunities,” said Earthjustice attorney Keith Bauerle. “In signing off on these leases, the Forest Service has ignored those values and the million plus Americans who spoke out in favor of preserving roadless areas and their resources."

    "Oil and gas development in these roadless places would ruin exactly those qualities that our customers are seeking when they backpack or hike into these wild and scenic areas," said Peter Metcalf of Black Diamond Equipment, an outdoor equipment maker. "Recreation generates, in a long term and sustainable manner, over 80 percent of the economic value of these lands, yet the Forest Service gave no consideration to Utahns who recreate in the great outdoors or to the outdoor industry when it signed off on these leases. It's bad policy and a bad deal -- bad for people, bad for the outdoor industry, and bad for Utah's economy that is better served by sustainable recreation than one-time drilling."

    "It's un-American to give the public no notice, and no input, in this decision," said Amy Mall. "The great majority of Americans and Utahns want to leave behind a legacy of wild forests for their children and grandchildren, and they should have a say in the future of these lands."
    The trumpet scatters its awful sound Over the graves of all lands Summoning all before the throne

    Death and mankind shall be stunned When Nature arises To give account before the Judge

  2. #2
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    Just WRONG


    Bush, stay the out of the Uintas.

    That's all I have to say.

  3. #3
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    ELF now has far more stuff to set on fire.

  4. #4
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  5. #5
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    Enviro's should do the same thing they with OG logging. Sue them into compliance, over and over and over. That and get out and non-violently protest.
    "These are crazy times Mr Hatter, crazy times. Crazy like Buddha! Muwahaha!"

  6. #6
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    They are already ruining 9 mile, now they want to ruin the Uintahs...
    "dad, do Unicorns poop."

  7. #7
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    Four more years of this..............

    But like all of us, I am a raging hypocrite who rides a gas guzzling,two stroke sled to go hike for skiing. And I drive 85 miles in my 1/2 ton truck, towing that sled to do it in the Uintas.

    So I really can't bitch too much until I get a wind generator on my house, more solar on my house instead of the motorhome, live closer to town to use less fossils in the commute, etc, etc.
    Last edited by Trackhead; 12-07-2004 at 09:29 PM.

  8. #8
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    Hunter..wehre you been? OUt drilling for oil or what? Selling land in the uintas i bet!
    There's a world out there full of color, dreams, and imagination. What are you waiting for?

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by char
    Enviro's should do the same thing they with OG logging. Sue them into compliance, over and over and over. That and get out and non-violently protest.
    I'm sure litigation will happen, but we need mad peeps in the streets saying GW. This is the tip of the iceberg.
    The trumpet scatters its awful sound Over the graves of all lands Summoning all before the throne

    Death and mankind shall be stunned When Nature arises To give account before the Judge

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