Politics and Nature

Red or Blue? Mining Law Defeat is Proof the West is Neither


By Eric Mack, 12-16-05

The recent debacle over proposed changes to the archaic 1872 mining law that were tucked into a federal budget bill by Nevada Republican Representative Jim Gibbons has revealed some important truths about the politics of land use in the New West.

Opposition to the measure rushed like an avalanche down both sides of the continental divide, bridging a highly polarized national political divide and rendering the solid red block that covered the Rocky Mountain states on electoral maps a year ago completely irrelevant.

Letters flooded fax machines in the 202 area code from a broad spectrum of groups ranging from mountain cities and counties, hunting and fishing groups to politicians from both parties, mining law professors, former federal officials, enviros and even a group representing the jewelry industry. All of them were “disturbed," “troubled" or in a variety of other distressed states over Gibbons’ legislation, which would allow for the “patenting," or sale at bargain-basement prices, of hundreds of thousands if not millions of acres mining claims on public lands. (It’s ridiculously cheap and easy for anyone to stake a mining claim, by the way.) http://www.mineweb.net/columns/american_notes/701743.htm" title=" http://www.mineweb.net/columns/american_notes/701743.htm"> Once patented, the land would be open to any of a myriad of development options like real estate or oil and gas exploration. Even mining industry publications were critical of the measure.

Before we can understand how such a disparate alliance materialized so quickly around a relatively obscure issue, it is worth looking into the possible motivations behind the genesis of the legislation.

Gibbons’ primary fellow proponent, California Republican and House Resources Committee Chairman Richard Pombo, has built his political capital through attempts to bulldoze any pesky government regulation that stands in the way of development, most notably his recent attempts to eviscerate the Endangered Species Act.

As for Gibbons himself, he is currently running for governor of Nevada, a mining state where over 80 percent of lands are owned by the federal government. With that in mind, his budget language appears to be (literally) one of the biggest pieces of pork in political history, until we note that none of the companies that would benefit the most from the legislation are based in Nevada. In fact, most of them are foreign companies.

It is worth noting that three mining companies that have staked almost a combined 600,000 acres worth of mining claims on public lands contributed over $60,000 to Gibbons’ political campaigns over the last decade. The bulk of those donations came from Denver-based Newmont Mining, which has over 347,000 acres worth of public claims, more than any other single claim-holder.

Given the record number of industry hand-outs and other pork projects that have been flowing from Washington, Gibbons’ audacity is hardly surprising. What he failed to factor into the equation was the unwillingness of Westerners from all political stripes to sacrifice the sacred cow of public lands. Land uses in the West are more varied and interconnected than perhaps in any other region. Here, a single 20-acre parcel might fuel local economies through tourism, recreation, agriculture, hunting and fishing, and yes, natural resource extraction. More and more, situations that bring these uses into direct conflict are creating strange political bedfellows, as Jim Gibbons recently discovered.

One of the arguments Gibbons put forth in support of the sale of mining claims on public lands was that it would boost the economies of towns where mines had ceased operations. He must have been surprised to read a letter from the San Miguel County, Colorado Commissioners expressing opposition and detailing their efforts to return patented lands at one of the largest precious metal mines near Telluride back to the public domain to prevent further development.

As Art Goodtimes, Chair of the Commissioners, explained, the “Red Mountain Project" is a “collaborative effort with the United States Forest Service, the Trust for Public Lands, the Idarado Mining Company and other owners of patented mining claim (that) has resulted in the transfer into federal ownership of thousands of acres."

Similar letters came in from Aspen and other communities hemmed in by public lands. They weighed the potential benefits of expanded development against the loss of public ownership and preservation and concluded that quality of life is a more sound investment than a subdivision.

That same philosophy is bringing together people from all walks of life across the West to form organizations like the Cimarron Watershed Alliance in Northern New Mexico. The CWA is one of New Mexico’s most active rural conservation groups, made up largely of rugged, Texas-style ranchers who would prefer not to be told what they can and can’t do on their land, but understand the need for cooperation among all land users to preserve the vital resources that allow them to live off the land.

"This is a unique group of individuals, business owners, politicians, ranchers, homeowners, government people from the Forest Service, Environmental Protection Agency and Soil Conservation — groups of people that usually don't agree on issues — who all come together in cooperation to maintain the watershed, not only for the current generation, but for generations to come," explained CWA Executive Director Mike Bain. "They put adversities aside to make it happen and that says a lot about the group." CWA stakeholders work together to ensure that land uses like grazing, road maintenance and recreation are done in a manner that maintains the health of the watershed.

Within the Cimarron Watershed lies the Valle Vidal, a section of pristine National Forest land treasured by outdoor enthusiasts, sportsmen, environmentalists and most recently, El Paso Corporation, which hopes to drill the area for gas, a proposal that has created another unifying rallying point for all of the above yet again. Just this week, the groundswell of support from across the political spectrum, and with a significant nudge from Democratic Governor Bill Richardson, led to the designation of Valle Vidal waters as an Outstanding National Resource, which offers the highest level of protection under the Clean Water Act.

For centuries, the West has been a land of iconic natural landscapes populated with robust individualists seeking an escape from the cement and steel congestion of the East. Today, development-oriented politicians are finding out there’s not much that a community of individualists is willing to trade for their paradise. After all, what do you give someone who already has everything?



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Comments

By hal herring, 12-17-05
By Hal Herring, 12-17-05
By Dave Skinner, 12-20-05

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