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WILD BILL

A Natural Alliance Foiled


By Bill Schneider, 12-15-05

Over the past decade of the “Wilderness drought� I covered in the last two columns, one aspect of the debate over how to protect our roadless land demands more attention. Mountain bikers, people who by their very nature should be supporting Wilderness designation, are opposing it.

Before I go any further into this hot button issue, I should say I do indeed own a mountain bike, and I ride it almost every day. But my mountain bike has street tires on it, and in the fifteen years I’ve owned it, it has never been on a single-track trail. I use it strictly for commuting. I say this because I don’t want my hiking buddies thinking I’m bias toward mountain bikers when they read this column. I do confess to a bias, though, but not for hikers or mountain bikers—for Wilderness.

It seems out of character, if not upsetting, that mountain bikers oppose Wilderness designation. Every mountain biker I know (and I know lots of them) also hikes, has a “green attitude� and wants roadless land protected. Yet, in the next breath they oppose the best tool we have to truly protect our last roadless land. Very few mountain bikers want to share trails with ATVs, but the International Mountain Bike Association (IMBA) routinely shares the podium with lobbyists representing the motorized recreation industry in opposing Wilderness proposals in California, Oregon, Idaho and several other states. Why?

The answer to that seems easy. The Forest Service banned mountain biking in Wilderness even though the Wilderness Act of 1964 did not disallow mountain bikers (see companion article). The modern mountain bike had not even been invented in 1964, but with its subjective regulations, the FS prohibited mountain biking in Wilderness. Why?

That question is even easier to answer. The FS hates Wilderness. The agency did not support the Wilderness Act in the first place, and since it passed, it has used a myriad of bureaucratic strategies to oppose every Wilderness designation—and has effectively scuttled many of them. You’ll never get a FS spokesperson to admit this in public, but the agency used the timeworn divide-and-conquer strategy to create anti-Wilderness constituencies, and I must say this worked beautifully on mountain bikers.

Witness what IMBA senior policy analyst Gary Sprung recently told Congress when testifying on an Oregon Wilderness bill. “IMBA generally supports the intent of the Lewis and Clark Mount Hood Wilderness Act because our members value protecting pristine lands from development. On the one hand, they want to protect the areas they ride, but on the other, they don't want to lose access to the trails they have ridden for almost two decades. Consequently, IMBA believes that the proposed Mount Hood Pedaler's Demonstration Experiment Area [translate: little ‘w’ wilderness alternative to Wilderness] is a positive step forward in public land policy regarding Wilderness as it protects the land while allowing bicycling.�

I view IMBA opposition to Wilderness as narrow and shortsighted, but clearly, it isn’t going away. Regrettably, both hikers and mountain bikers are deeply entrenched in their position, so we have an impasse, which I’m sure delights the FS and ATV advocacy groups and other Wilderness opponents. IMBA has played right into their hands.

I know hikers who don’t like sharing trails with mountain bikers, but this attitude also seems narrow and shortsighted. Would these hikers, I must ask, prefer sharing the trails with four-wheelers? Eventually, that’s what they’ll get in many areas if something doesn’t change.

Even though I don’t ride my mountain bike on trails, I live three blocks from a roadless area including Mount Helena City Park and nearby de facto, wilderness, which has about twenty-five miles of trails very heavily used by both hikers and mountain bikers. And guess what, it’s not a problem! For many years, current regulations have accommodated both groups of trail users with minimal if any environmental damage, safety problems or social conflict. Respect and courtesy has always ruled on Mount Helena.

Another spot jointly used by mountain bikers and hikers is the Rattlesnake National Recreation Area on the outskirts of Missoula. I’ve hiked there several times and encountered mountain bikers on every trip, but again, no problem! Much less problem, I might add, than the conflict between hikers and people using stock animals. Much less environmental damage, too.

So, that’s the problem, but what’s the solution? My first choice would be for the FS to stop over-interpreting the Wilderness Act and recognize that the forefathers of the Act did not intend to ban mountain bikes, but I’m not going to hold my breath until that happens. And if it doesn’t, we still have two major solutions—a new mindset by IMBA that values “the greater good� by ending opposition to Wilderness or a new mindset by hiking groups that compromises with IMBA by supporting a little “w� designation disallowing motorized recreation but allowing muscle-powered transportation.

Perhaps IMBA could decide to be satisfied with the many thousands of miles of trails that would still be available to mountain bikers even if every proposed Wilderness bill passed. But I have seen little indication this might happen.

Or perhaps hiking and pro-Wilderness organizations could accept little “w� designations like IMBA’s proposed alternative called National Conservation Areas. Likewise, I see no signs that pro-Wilderness groups plan to support little “w� wilderness. As time marches on and our base of wildlands continues to diminish, perhaps hiking groups will re-consider. Little “w� sure seems better than the alternative—more decades of continued Wilderness drought and the gradual taming of our wildlands.

The punch line is: mountain bikers and hikers are a natural alliance that has been foiled. The two groups—which oddly enough are often the same people—should form a symbiotic relationship and work together to protect the last roadless lands. Somebody needs to blink, soon, because if they don’t, I know what's going to happen.



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