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WILL IDAHO AND MONTANA BE LEFT OUT?

Another Public Lands Omnibus Bill Coming Soon, Maybe

The 111th Congress could come up with another massive public lands omnibus bill before convening in January. Congressman Mike Simpson's (R-ID) Central Idaho Economic Development and Recreation Act and Senator Jon Tester's (D-MT) Forest Jobs and Recreation Act could be included, or not.

By Bill Schneider, 7-28-10

Boulder White Clouds, Idaho's next Wilderness? Photo courtesy of the Idaho Conservation League.

Boulder White Clouds, Idaho's next Wilderness? Photo courtesy of the Idaho Conservation League.

With the severe escalation of partisan politics and divisiveness in recent years, it has become basically impossible to pass a Wilderness bill or any other type of public lands or outdoor recreation legislation on its own. Time on the Senate and House floor is so scarce and closely guarded and partisanship so bitter that the only way public lands legislation has any realistic chance is a relatively new invention called the omnibus bill.

As you may remember, Congress passed and President Barack Obama signed S. 22, a massive public lands omnibus bill on March 30, 2009 after a long, heated debate and lots of last-minute maneuvering. The 1,300-page bill was the combination of 170 pieces of legislation creating new national parks and monuments, plus park expansions and national recreation trails, protecting hundreds of miles of wild and scenic rivers, and designating more than 2 million acres of Wilderness.

Amazingly, the vote was moderately bipartisan, which I suspect is the inherent strength and strategy of an omnibus bill i.e. putting something sweet from so many congressional districts, both red and blue, into one package that it more or less assures success. You know, sort of like the Department of Defense putting a base in every state to get the votes it needs.

Now, there’s a lot of chatter about another huge omnibus bill coming out of the 111th Congress, which ends on January 3, 2011.  There’s nothing official yet, and it all rests in the hands of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV). He has power, and he has to decide to make space for such a bill. Currently, there is no official word that he’ll do so.

Senator Reid is getting a few calls, though. The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee has already reported out (i.e. approved and sent to the floor) over 100 pieces of public lands legislation, and all of their sponsors know it’s unlikely any of their bills will even get a vote unless they’re all piled together into an omnibus bill. If not, they all die and have to be re-born in the 112th Congress.

Unless, of course, Senator Reid agrees to an omnibus bill.

Unfortunately, he’s locked in a big re-election battle to keep his membership in America’s most elite club. Normally, that’d make him gunshy about doing anything controversial like a big bill that contained the “W” word, Wilderness. He’d probably have to vote against it.

Fortunately, the Nevada primary gave him a weak, over-the-top radical opponent, Sharon Angle, who has suggested “Second Amendment remedies” if Congress doesn’t change its ways, not to mention privatizing Social Security and eliminating the departments of energy and education, so Reid’s chance of re-election appears excellent. Angle has, in fact, become known as “the only Republican Reid could beat.”

If Reid allows an omnibus bill, it will probably come up in the lame-duck session after November 2. If it does, both Idaho and Montana hope to have a dog in the fight, but neither state is in the game, yet.

With the support of the entire Idaho delegation, Congressman Mike Simpson (R-ID) is trying again to pass the Central Idaho Economic Development Act (CIEDRA). The 2010 version, H.R. 3603, is a slightly improved version of the bill that died at the end of the 110th Congress.

CIERDA had a hearing on June 16 before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Subcommittee on Public Lands and Forests. Idaho Senators Mike Crapo and Jim Risch, both Republicans, and Walt Minnick, a Democrat, support Simpson’s bill, but Governor Butch Otter, a Republican, opposes it because he doesn’t want any more Wilderness designated in Idaho.

Among its many provisions, CIEDRA finally gives permanent protection as Wilderness to a downsized, but still spectacular, 332,828-acre Boulder White Clouds Wilderness Study Area, which has been managed like Wilderness for many years.

In other words, even though CIEDRA doesn’t really change the management of the Boulder White Clouds, Governor Otter considers it “new” Wilderness. Ironically, even though the state’s Republican congressman and both Republican senators support CIEDRA, the state’s Republican party passed a resolution opposing it. Go figure.

Anyway, as I write this, the Subcommittee on Public Lands and Forests is working through the testimony from the hearing and may vote on the bill in the near future. And if the committee sends it to the floor, it could end up in the next omnibus bill and become law of the land.

That’s what happened last year when under the leadership of Senator Crapo, Idaho won approval for its first Wilderness designation in 29 years, the Owyhee-Bruneau Wilderness (517,000 acres in six units) along with 316 miles of Wild and Scenic Rivers in southern Idaho. This was all part of the Owyhee Initiative, a 20-year collaborative effort, which morphed into one of the 170 bills in S. 22.

On the other hand, Montana, a major public lands state, had nothing in that historic, far-reaching omnibus bill. It could be different this time around, but right now, it looks like another loss for Montana.

It all depends on Senator Jon Tester’s willingness to change course on his beleaguered Forest Jobs and Recreation Act, S. 1470. Tester’s bill has had a hearing before the same subcommittee, back on December 17, but the bill has yet to be reported out of committee because of major disagreement among subcommittee members on parts of the bill. The subcommittee won’t report it out onto the floor in its present form, so it can’t get in an omnibus bill, which means it has no chance of becoming law.

It’s complicated, but in short, other subcommittee members and the U.S. Forest Service don’t like Tester’s mandated logging provisions, nor his special intrusions on the Wilderness Act of 1964 by allowing ATVs and helicopters in certain designated Wilderness areas. The committee suggested removing these provisions from S. 1470, but Tester refused.

If this impasse continues, we can expect another public lands omnibus bill with nothing for Montana.

To regress, as I’ve already recommended several times, Tester shouldn’t try to do mandated logging and Wilderness in the same bill. Splitting with my green friends, I’m okay with mandating some logging in already roaded landscapes, and I wouldn’t mind seeing even more than the measly 10,000 acres per year called for in Tester’s bill, but I think this issue should be taken up in a separate piece of legislation, which could also be included in the same public lands omnibus bill.

This doesn’t seem that hard. Take the subcommittee’s recommendations to make S 1470 a true wilderness bill creating 668,000 acres of new Wilderness, as it now does, and do what needs to done to help Montana’s struggling wood products industry and try to address the pine beetle blight in a separate (and hopefully more aggressive) piece of legislation.

Slip both pieces of legislation into the next omnibus bill and get ready to celebrate its passage.

Foootnote: For extensive NewWest.Net coverage on the issue of wilderness in the northern Rockies, click here.



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