Playground or Preserve?How the recreation industry has become the newest threat to our public lands THERE IS NOBODY LESS POPULAR among Coloradans than a Texan. So if your brother and you happen to be Texans who get your Dodge Ram
The Ram is a full-size pickup truck from Chrysler LLC's Dodge brand. The name was first used in 1981 on the redesigned Ram and Power Ram, though it came from the hood ornament used on and Jeep Wrangler The Wrangler (also known as the YJ, TJ, and JK, as explained below) is an off-road vehicle produced by American automaker Chrysler under its Jeep marque. stuck on a steep mountain slope 12,500 feet high in Colorado's rugged San Juan Mountains San Juan Mountains Segment of the southern Rocky Mountains, southwestern Colorado and northern New Mexico, U.S. The mountains extend from southwestern Colorado along the course of the Rio Grande to the Chama River in northern New Mexico. , you are not going to get much sympathy. Last August, the Hatcher brothers of Texas learned this from the locals when they drove their pickup truck and Jeep off-road and a few miles later got stuck. "There are abundant signs in the area that say, `Do Not Drive Off the Designated Roads' and yet they drive off a mile or two across the tundra," San Juan County San Juan County is the name of four counties in the United States:
n. 1. A sheriff's deputy. Charlie Moore
n. Slang 1. Chiefly Southern U.S. Brother. 2. A white working-class man of the southern United States, stereotypically regarded as uneducated and gregarious with his peers. One" and "Bubba Two" Six days later, the Hatchers got their trucks down with the help of a local, his Hummer, and a winch, in a dangerous five-hour operation. Dozens of people watched. The brothers each escaped the debacle with $300 in fines from the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM BLM n abbr (US) (= Bureau of Land Management) → les domaines ). The fragile alpine tundra they drove over, however, may take hundreds of years to recover. The Texas brothers were big news in Denver, and I remember reading the stories, shaking my head along with everybody else. But the fact is, we don't need Texans to muck up our alpine tundra here in Colorado; we are doing a fine job of it ourselves. In the three years since I moved West, I've seen plenty of people mixing with nature, and nature getting the worst of it. I've been part of a traffic jam in Rocky Mountain National Park Rocky Mountain National Park National park, north-central Colorado, U.S. Established in 1915 and enclosing part of the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains, the park has an area of 262,191 acres (106,105 hectares). , all of us there to gawk at elk during the autumn mating season mating season n → época de celo mating season n → saison f des amours mating season mating n → . I've been on top of Grays Peak, a popular day-hike destination near Denver, and seen some hiker's dog chase snowy white-bearded mountain goats. I've seen four-wheelers grind their way up desert rock formations near Moab, Utah
Moab is a city in Grand County, in eastern Utah, in the western United States. , where century-old cryptobiotic Adj. 1. cryptobiotic - of or related to the state of cryptobiosis crust, made up of soil lichens Lichens Symbiotic associations of fungi (mycobionts) and photosynthetic partners (photobionts). These associations always result in a distinct morphological body termed a thallus that may adhere tightly to the substrate or be leafy, stalked, or hanging. , green algae green algae: see algae; Chlorophyta. , bacteria, and mosses, is as easily damaged and difficult to restore as alpine tundra. And of course, I've skied. I have a local's season pass good at several Colorado resorts, including Vail-owned Breckenridge and Keystone, which all have plans to expand their terrain despite objections from local environmental groups about harm to wetlands and wildlife. Welcome to the next great threat to the health of our federal public lands. It is us, the people who love them so much and the recreation industry our tax dollars support. As a nation, we own 652 million acres of public land, nearly one-third of the entire landmass land·mass n. A large unbroken area of land. landmass Noun a large continuous area of land landmass of the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. . The great bulk of these federal lands--460 million acres--is administered by the U.S. Department of Interior's BLM and the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Forest Service. In comparison, the National Park Service, also under Interior, has just 83 million acres. Some of our wildest scenery is overseen by the Forest Service and the BLM. The great majority of Colorado's 54 mountains rising 14,000 feet or higher are on Forest Service or BLM land, as are much, if not most, of the red deserts of Utah, the hard granite Sierra Nevada Sierra Nevada, mountain range, Spain Sierra Nevada (syā`rä nāvä`thä), chief mountain range of S Spain, in Granada prov., running from east to west for c.60 mi (100 km), parallel to the Mediterranean Sea. , the prairies of the Dakotas, the swamps of Florida, the plains of Mississippi, and the Appalachians in the East. For most of their existence, the BLM and Forest Service catered to timber, mining, oil, gas, and grazing industries, which operate under heavy public subsidies. But those industries' dominance is on the decline. Logging on national forests, for example, peaked in 1987 at 12 billion board feet, and had declined by nearly three-fourths a decade later. The real growth industry is recreation. In 1946, the Forest Service hosted 18 million visitors; in 2000, that number was close to a billion. Interior Department recreational visits are also on the rise, and numbered nearly 400 million between the Park Service, the BLM, and the National Wildlife Refuges last year. The economic value of recreation, in fact, far outpaces that of timber harvests, the traditional "product" of the nation's national forest system. The Forest Service estimates that last year the national forests generated $110.7 billion in revenue from recreation, compared to $3.5 billion from timber. With increased recreational use comes abuse. There is a difference in degree, to be sure, between a mining operation leaching arsenic into the water, or a timber company clear-cutting forests, and an off-road vehicle off-road vehicle off n → véhicule m tout-terrain (ORV ORV abbr. off-road vehicle ) rider tearing a trail through the forest. But the damage is nevertheless significant. Yet confronting recreational challenges to the environment is in some ways much tougher than confronting those posed by the timber, mining, and grazing industries. Unlike huge, faceless companies, the snowmobilers darting through Colorado pine trees represent Middle America Middle America 1 A region of southern North America comprising Mexico, Central America, and sometimes the West Indies. Middle American adj. & n. . As regular, taxpaying citizens exercising their constitutional right to pursue happiness, off-roaders, skiers, and other recreationists are enjoying the great outdoors, not trying to profit from it--which makes them a particularly difficult constituency for public officials to say no to. Even environmental groups have been wary of attacking the Gore-Tex set, since their members are often well represented in it. "It's pretty hard to demonize de·mon·ize tr.v. de·mon·ized, de·mon·iz·ing, de·mon·iz·es 1. To turn into or as if into a demon. 2. To possess by or as if by a demon. 3. families out there having fun," says Andy Stahl, executive director of Forest Service Employees for Environmental Ethics Environmental ethics is the part of environmental philosophy which considers the ethical relationship between human beings and the natural environment. It exerts influence on a large range of disciplines including law, sociology, theology, economics, ecology and geography. . "It's harder than criticizing Weyerhauser" It's not just environmentalists who are recognizing the tricky new dynamics of public land use politics. The old timber and mining industries, in fact, have capitalized on it. In a brilliant political move, industries bashed for years by environmentalists have found new cover in linking arms with ORV enthusiasts who share their interests in keeping roads open on public lands. The ORV riders, in particular, complicate what used to be a fairly straightforward duel between industry and environmentalists over land management. Confronting these new challenges to our public lands is about to get even harder. Major initiatives undertaken by the Clinton administration Noun 1. Clinton administration - the executive under President Clinton executive - persons who administer the law , including a rule banning new road-building in national forests, a new policy to protect old-growth forests, new ecosystem-oriented forest planning regulations, and a ban on snowmobiles in most national parks This is a list of national parks ordered by nation. Africa
Ann Veneman Ann Margaret Veneman (born June 29, 1949) is currently the Executive Director of UNICEF. She was the first woman and first Californian to become the United States Secretary of Agriculture. , the new Secretary of Agriculture, and Interior Secretary Gale Norton Gale Ann Norton (born March 11, 1954) served as the 48th United States Secretary of the Interior from 2001 to 2006 under President George W. Bush. She was the first woman to hold the position. have already signaled their sympathy for off-roaders and other heavy recreational users of public lands. In fact, before taking the agriculture post, Veneman was a lobbyist for a coalition of off-roaders, now teamed up with Chamber of Commerce types and grazing interests, fighting a Clinton plan to reduce logging and some off-road vehicle access to part of the Sierra Nevada mountain range. "Recreation is the next battleground. The fights over timber have been largely won by the environmental community," says Jim Lyons, who served as the Clinton administration's Agriculture Undersecretary for Natural Resources and the Environment. 'As recreation increases, impact on the resources becomes visible. The public and environmental community have become concerned. That's the formula for a fight" Selling Fun on the White River National Forest Nowhere is this brewing recreational fight more obvious than in Colorado's White River National Forest, a 2.25-million-acre spread just a few hours' drive from Denver. Some 3.5 million people now call the Denver area home, and lots of us love to play in the White River, attracted by its many peaks and meadows bursting with wildflowers and wildlife. In August 1999, White River National Forest administrators released a proposed new plan for management of the forest based on evaluations of plant life, wildlife, wetlands, and recreational use. Nationally, more than two-thirds of such forest plans are due for revision in the next three years. The current battle over the White River plan is evidence of the growing national power of the new alliance between off-roaders and industry to influence these plans. As required, the forest plan sets forth several different "alternatives," each with a different theme--for example, a focus on recreation, on biodiversity, on timber cutting. The Forest Service indicates which is its "preferred alternative," and the public has a chance to submit comments. "Alternative I" was developed with the help of environmental groups that got involved in the planning process early on, and emphasizes the principles of"conservation biology conservation biology n. The branch of biology that deals with the effects of humans on the environment and with the conservation of biological diversity. " which stresses the goal of biological diversity. White River National Forest officials, however, have made Alternative D" their preference. It would mean new restrictions on motorized mo·tor·ize tr.v. mo·tor·ized, mo·tor·iz·ing, mo·tor·iz·es 1. To equip with a motor. 2. To supply with motor-driven vehicles. 3. To provide with automobiles. vehicles in some parts of the forest and would limit expansion of ski areas to land already zoned that way, but it is a more traditional approach to forest management. Back in 1984, when the existing Forest Service plan for the White River was adopted, there was no need to consider any restrictions, because there were so few people traveling the forests by anything other than foot or horseback. Now all-terrain motor bikes, snowmobiles, and mountain bikes are ubiquitous on the White River trails. The Forest Service says it barely has the resources to maintain a quarter of the 2,400 miles of official roads that wind through the forest, let alone police the hundreds of miles of new trails forged by off-roaders. Nor can it address the damage they've already done. The Wilderness Society calls off-road vehicles the "the single fastest growing threat to the natural integrity of our public lands" Before-and-after photographs collected by the group detail severe erosion to hillsides, streambeds, and desert sands on public lands throughout the West. Erosion has far-reaching effects. Soil entering streams and rivers, for example, can harm fish habitat. In addition, many ORVs, motorcycles, and other recreational vehicles use inefficient, noisy two-stroke engines that pollute vastly more than standard automobiles. Subtler is the impact on wildlife, whose foraging and mating patterns can be affected by the noise and traffic. Motorized vehicles also contribute to the spread of non-native plants, a huge problem in the West. Yet no sooner did the White River National Forest release the proposed plan, than the staff got flooded with complaints from off-roaders. At a series of open-house meetings across the state, angry members of local off-road clubs appeared in force. At one such tense meeting, held at a Denver Snowmobile Expo in the fall of 1999, the questions for the Forest Service officials came fast and furious. "What are the cross-country skiers giving up?" asked one attendee. "Why does segregation work here when it does not work in the rest of society?" asked another. The off-roaders clearly believed that environmentalists' interests and those of the non-motorized recreationists--the cross-country skiers and hikers and so forth--had been put before theirs. The off-roaders were right in observing that there had been a philosophy shift at the Forest Service. Twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights. 2. ago, the Forest Service catered to companies see king to exploit the natural resources on public lands, with environmental protection taking a back seat to industry's financial interests. Agency officials believed their priority was to ensure, for instance, that timber companies had decent roads to access remote forests, rather than to protect those forests from human degradation. Efforts to sustain the forests were mostly designed so that the timber companies would have a steady supply of lumber. The new White River National Forest supervisor, Martha Ketelle, is representative of the changes that have occurred within the agency. An "ologist" rather than a graduate of forestry schools, she has an undergraduate degree “First degree” redirects here. For the BBC television series, see First Degree. An undergraduate degree (sometimes called a first degree or simply a degree in geology and master's degrees in hydrology hydrology, study of water and its properties, including its distribution and movement in and through the land areas of the earth. The hydrologic cycle consists of the passage of water from the oceans into the atmosphere by evaporation and transpiration (or , geology, and landscape architecture. She is also a member of Forest Service Employees for Environmental Ethics. In Ketelle's mind, the conflict was the result of changing times. "We have been put in a confrontational position with the culture of the Old West," Ketelle says. "There is always a new place to explore. They don't like the idea that the range is getting smaller." As the debate over the future of the White River heated up, several members of Colorado's congressional delegation jumped into the fray. In November 1999, Rep. Scott Mcinnis Scott Steve McInnis (born May 9, 1953) is a former Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Colorado. Born in Glenwood Springs, Colorado, McInnis graduated from Glenwood Springs High School and attended Mesa State College. He earned a B.A. (R-Colo.) called a meeting at the Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce to discuss strategy for White River. He invited snowmobile and offroad vehicle groups, representatives from Vail Resorts Vail Resorts, Inc. runs four ski resorts in Colorado, as well as one in Lake Tahoe (on the California-Nevada border) and a summer resort in Wyoming. They also own luxury resort hotels throughout the United States. The company trades on the New York Stock Exchange, symbol MTN. , the Colorado Farm Bureau, and the Colorado Timber Industry Association, and other industry groups, who also happen to give large sums to the congressman's campaign fund. Also attending the meeting was Richard Woodrow, now retired, who had Ketelle's job in 1984. Groups had been invited to submit their concerns to Woodrow, who would put together a new alternative plan reflecting their needs and wants. During his tenure, Woodrow was known for his pro-ski-industry and pro-timber-industry views. Woodrow believes Forest Services current direction is all wrong. "I saw a philosophical shift from a national forest for multiple use toward a conservation and Park Service type approach," he says. "It's a shift away from the forest for recreation, and that's what the White River forest is for." Woodrow says he was working as a volunteer, although "a couple of folks are helping me out with expenses--a computer, a fax." He refused to identify the source of these contributions. Around the same time that Rep. McInnis called his meeting, Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell Ben Nighthorse Campbell (born April 13, 1933) is an American politician. He was a U.S. Senator from Colorado from 1993 until 2005 and was for some time the only Native American serving in the U.S. Congress. Campbell was a U.S. (R-Colo.) was also at work. In a study by U.S. Public Interest Research Group, Campbell ranked third in the Senate for political action committee (PAC) contributions from companies associated with the Blue Ribbon blue ribbon denotes highest honor. [Western Folklore: Brewer Dictionary, 127] See : Prize Coalition. This organization of off-road vehicle enthusiasts, whose slogan is "Preserving our natural resources FOR the public, not FROM the public," receives financial support from timber, mining, oil, and gas companies, as well as ORV and snowmobile manufacturers such as Yamaha, Honda, and Polaris. Campbell, along with McInnis, pushed for a delay in the deadline for the official comment period, and he also held a congressional hearing Congressional hearings are the principal formal method by which committees collect and analyze information in the early stages of legislative policymaking. Whether confirmation hearings — a procedure unique to the Senate — legislative, oversight, investigative, or a on it that featured testimony from most of the industry and off-road groups that oppose the plan. Only one environmental group testified. On May 8, 2000, the day before the comment period deadline, McInnis submitted his own plan for the White River National Forest, authored by Woodrow. Mcinnis, who is the new chairman of the House Subcommittee on Forests and Forest Health, called it "reasonable," and a "blended alternative," drawing the best of all the various plans together into a new one. Local environmental groups, however, quickly labeled it as "little more than an industry wish list." A close analysis of the McInnis plan by a coalition of local environmental groups revealed that it recommended about 16,000 acres for wilderness protection-about one-third the amount proposed by the Forest Service, and just 5 percent of the 300,000 acres on the environmental coalitions wish list. The congressman's plan would allow ski areas the possibility of expanding beyond their current permit boundaries, unlike the Forest Service's plan, which would only allow expansion within the current permit limits. The level of logging permitted would quadruple. Finally, the plan would allow motorized vehicles on more of the forest than the agency's plan. The White River National Forest has yet to release its final plan, which was originally scheduled to be completed this spring, but has been delayed until August. White River is not the only place the new industry-off-roader alliance is fighting environmental protections for public lands. For example, a lawsuit filed by the state of Idaho challenging Clinton's last-minute rule that forbids road-building on 58.5 million acres of national forests and limits logging, was joined by the paper company, Boise Cascade Boise Cascade Holdings, LLC, which uses the trade name Boise, is an American pulp and paper company, ranked as the thirteenth largest forest products company in the world. , and off-road vehicle organizations. (The Bush administration has delayed the effective implementation date of the new rule and has until mid-May to review it.) In California, the industry-sponsored Sierra Nevada Access, Multiple-Use & Stewardship Coalition, opposes a Clinton plan to reduce logging by about 50 percent on 11.5 million acres of national forests in the Sierra Nevada. The plan also includes some restrictions on off-road vehicle use. SAMS SAMS Scottish Association for Marine Science SAMS Space Acceleration Measurement System SAMS South American Missionary Society (of the Episcopal Church, Inc) SAMS School of Advanced Military Studies (US Army) , as the coalition is called, has a membership that includes timber companies, off-road clubs, Chambers of Commerce, grazing interests, and homeowners associations. Not surprisingly, the Bush administration is interested in revising the Sierra plan. Before becoming Bush's Agriculture Secretary, Veneman helped prepare SAMS' formal comments and congressional testimony against the plan, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. The Washington Post. In February, Veneman recused herself from reconsideration of the Sierra plan--but only after receiving inquiries about her conflict from the Post. Selling Fun--and Lots of Real Estate The U.S. skiing industry got its start in the White River. During World War II, the army trained soldiers of its 10th Mountain Division there. From their base at Camp Hale Camp Hale, between Red Cliff and Leadville in the Eagle River valley in Colorado, was a United States Army training facility constructed in 1942 for what became the 10th Mountain Division. It was named in honor of General Irving Hale. , they learned how to scale cliffs, orient themselves in a winter landscape, and, most important, to ski. After the war, they founded resorts such as Vail and Aspen, all on Forest Service land. What began with a group of quirky veterans is now big business. Nationally, resort ownership has become consolidated, and the resorts on the White River are part of the trend. Since 1997, Vail Resorts, for instance, has owned four of the 11 ski areas in the forest Vail, Beaver Creek Beaver Creek may refer to numerous places, mainly stream and towns. The USGS database records 658 waterways and 19 populated places using the name in the United States and numerous others using related forms like Beaver Creek Ditch, Beaver Creek Swamp, Beaver Creek Lake, Beaver , Breckenridge, and Keystone. The company would have bought a fifth--Arapahoe Basin--but the Justice Department's antitrust division wouldn't allow it. The whole area around White River is one big company town. People drawn here because of the mountains usually find themselves working for the tourism industry, which provides more than 60 percent of the jobs. Another 20 percent work in construction, building trophy homes and condominium developments, or in finance, insurance, and real estate. Jobs that were once traditional in these mountains--mining, logging, and ranching--barely show up enough in the statistics to be counted. Despite the change in the type of industry here over the past 20 years, conflicts between the environment and industry have continued. And the relationship between the government and industries that profit from use of public lands has also remained much the same. What few people know is that, just like with the timber, mining, grazing, and oil and gas industries, taxpayers subsidize the ski industry. Unlike the old industries, whose products contribute to the general economy, it is primarily the wealthy who enjoy the "fun" that is the recreation industry's "output" The crowds that descend on Colorado every winter have money. At Vail, during peak season, lift tickets cost as much as $61 a day--and that's not counting ski rentals, lessons, hotel, food, and lattes. More than half of Vail's visitors come from households with incomes higher than $100,000. This is where the Kennedys spend their holidays and where Ivana Trump Ivana Trump (born Ivana Marie Zelníčková IPA: [ˈɪvana ˈmarɪjɛ ˈzɛlɲi:tʃkova:] and Mafia Maples fought over "The Donald" slope-side. Former Sen. John Glenn owns property in Vail; so do Jack Kemp Please see the relevant discussion on the . and Ross Perot H. Ross Perot (born June 27, 1930) is an American businessman from Texas, who is best known for seeking the office of President of the United States in 1992 and 1996. Perot founded Electronic Data Systems (EDS) in 1962 and later sold the company to General Motors and founded Perot . Though some resorts offer discounts for locals, skiing remains too expensive for the majority of Americans. The main subsidies for these winter playgrounds of the rich are 40-year term leases for Forest Service land. In 1998, the latest year for which statistics are available, White River ski resorts paid the U.S. Treasury U.S. Treasury Created in 1798, the United States Department of the Treasury is the government (Cabinet) department responsible for issuing all Treasury bonds, notes and bills. Some of the government branches operating under the U.S. Treasury umbrella include the IRS, U.S. just $7.6 million. Nationwide, ski areas paid only $18 million to the U.S. Treasury for their use of public lands, a miniscule min·is·cule adj. Variant of minuscule. Adj. 1. miniscule - very small; "a minuscule kitchen"; "a minuscule amount of rain fell" minuscule portion of their profits. The fees ski areas pay are the product of a little-noticed new law passed in 1996. At the urging of the National Ski Areas Association, Congress revamped the system for calculating fees that ski areas pay for using public land. The U.S. General Accounting Office had issued a report in 1993 that charged that the U.S. Forest Service was not collecting fair market value from ski areas. But the new law did little to address this. Instead, it simply shifted the tab among the resorts-and then sweetened sweet·en v. sweet·ened, sweet·en·ing, sweet·ens v.tr. 1. To make sweet or sweeter by adding sugar, honey, saccharin, or another sweet substance. 2. To make more pleasant or agreeable. the deal by exempting the ski industry from environmental review when resorts renew their 40-year term leases. Despite these subsidies, skiing is a tough business to profit from. Even with aggressive artificial snow-making to force a Thanksgiving opening, most U.S. ski resorts can sell lift tickets only about five months out of the year, if they are lucky. As skier numbers have remained relatively flat since the early 1990s, the ski industry has discovered that real estate for vacation homes and rentals is where the real money is. "In 1995, real-estate sales at Keystone were 2 percent of our revenues," Keystone Resort's John Rutter John Milford Rutter CBE (born September 24 1945) is an English composer, choral conductor, editor, arranger and record producer. told fellow ski-resort executives last year at an annual luncheon. "In this past year, real-estate sales were 45 percent of our revenues" The ski industry's devotion to real estate helps drive up prices of privately built homes as well. In Eagle County, near Vail, home prices jumped 119 percent between 1990 and 1999, and the median price for a new home was $631,270. Ski-resort employees rarely can afford to rent a place nearby, and so they either commute long distances--creating traffic jams and mountain smog--or cram themselves into shared apartments. Widespread real-estate development near public lands can also be expensive for taxpayers who don't live there. The thousands of wildfires that ripped across the American West during the hot, dry summer of 2000 were all the more threatening because so many people now have homes near forest borders. Last October, Congress approved nearly $2 billion in funds to prevent and fight wildfires. The pressure to control these fires, which are part of the forest's natural cycle, was exacerbated by the property owners who wanted their houses protected, much the way rich people in North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop. want government-backed insurance for their luxury beach houses in Hurricane Alley. In Pursuit of Shorter Lift Lines During the '90s, as the economy expanded, so did the ski resorts. The Forest Service rarely got in their way, despite numerous challenges by environmentalists. Since 1984, ski areas on the White River doubled their terrain. The most famous of these expansions is Vail Resorts' controversial "Category III" project, which allowed expansion into 885 acres that, environmentalists argued, were key habitat for the Canada lynx. In October 1998, Vail suffered $12 million in arson damage, allegedly at the hands of an extremist environmental group; the Earth Liberation Front The Earth Liberation Front (ELF) is the collective name for anonymous and autonomous individuals or groups that, according to the now defunct Earth Liberation Front Press Office, use "economic sabotage and guerrilla warfare to stop the exploitation and destruction of the (see p. 50). Despite the setback, Vail rebuilt its burned lodge and broke ground for an expansion in July 1999. In January 2000, the new area opened. Now named Blue Sky Basin One of the most debated and controversial ski area expansions in Colorado history, Blue Sky basin is the most recent expansion to Vail Ski Resort. The parcel opened to skiers in 2000 despite controversy stemming from the question of whether the expansion would endanger the lynx, a , it is larger than each of a dozen Colorado ski resorts Colorado offers many world-class ski resorts. World-renowned ski areas such as Vail and Aspen are rivaled by some of the lesser-known ones listed below: List of ski resorts
Many of Colorado's ski areas want to expand even further, both within their permit areas on Forest Service land and beyond, including surrounding land that they own privately. The to-do list for Vail Resorts includes the Breckenridge resort's plans to add 165 acres of Forest Service land, along with real estate development of its own land at the foot of Peak 7, which has been controversial because of wetlands known as Cucumber Gulch, home to the rare boreal bo·re·al adj. 1. Of or relating to the north; northern. 2. Of or concerning the north wind. 3. Boreal toad, which the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers call an "aquatic resource of national importance" Beaver Creek is lobbying to expand downhill skiing into nearby McCoy Park; Keystone Ski Resort wants to expand into an area known as Jones Gulch; and so on. Ski area expansion can be as damaging to the environment as any timber company logging plan. In comments on the proposed White River plan, the EPA EPA eicosapentaenoic acid. EPA abbr. eicosapentaenoic acid EPA, n.pr See acid, eicosapentaenoic. EPA, n. noted that ski areas on the White River make up just three percent of the forest acreage, yet "no other land management prescription on the Forest directly results in more stream-water depletion, wetland impacts, air pollution, permanent vegetation change, or permanent habitat loss. [Since 1984], more wetland impacts and stream depletions resulted from ski area expansion and improvement than from all other Forest management activities combined, including many direct and indirect impacts that are permanent (irreversible and irretrievable.)" When it comes to water, ski resorts can have a huge impact on the environment, particularly in the arid West. Paving over wetlands to build condos does more than harm wildlife; it can affect drinking water drinking water supply of water available to animals for drinking supplied via nipples, in troughs, dams, ponds and larger natural water sources; an insufficient supply leads to dehydration; it can be the source of infection, e.g. leptospirosis, salmonellosis, or of poisoning, e.g. quality miles away, since wetlands act as a natural filter for the water supply. Artificial snowmaking snow·mak·ing n. Production of artificial snow in the form of granular ice particles for use on ski slopes. invites more problems. Streams depleted de·plete tr.v. de·plet·ed, de·plet·ing, de·pletes To decrease the fullness of; use up or empty out. [Latin d by snowmaking machines are poor incubators for fish eggs, which shrivel and die for lack of water. Drawing large amounts of water can also exacerbate existing pollution. A case in point is the heavy metals heavy metals, n.pl metallic compounds, such as aluminum, arsenic, cadmium, lead, mercury, and nickel. Exposure to these metals has been linked to immune, kidney, and neurotic disorders. found recently in the drainage that runs through the middle of Keystone. Highly toxic highly toxic Occupational medicine adjective Referring to a chemical that 1. Has a median lethal dose–LD50 of ≤ 50 mg/kg when administered orally to 200-300 g albino rats 2. heavy metals are usually a sign of past mining, but there had been no mining in the area. But Keystone draws water for artificial snowmaking from the Snake River Snake River River, northwestern U.S. It is the largest tributary of the Columbia River and one of the most important streams in the Pacific Northwest. It rises in the mountains of Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming and flows south and west through Idaho, turning north at which is polluted from runoff from old mine sites and tailings Tailings (also known as tailings pile, tails, leach residue, or slickens[1]) are the materials left over[2] after the process of separating the valuable fraction from the worthless fraction of an ore. piles. Yet the pressure to continue with artificial snowmaking to remain competitive is severe. Since Keystone first started making snow in 1970, the resort has increased its snowmaking capacity from 30 million gallons annually to more than 160 million gallons. A similar amount is used at other Colorado resorts. The ski industry has attempted to deflect enviornmentalists' growing criticism of these practices. In 2000, the National Ski Areas Association released "Sustainable Slopes," a list of voluntary environmental principles. But most environmental groups described the charter as a toothless public relations public relations, activities and policies used to create public interest in a person, idea, product, institution, or business establishment. By its nature, public relations is devoted to serving particular interests by presenting them to the public in the most effort that stopped short of addressing the harmful effects of expansion. In explaining the glaring omission, Stacy Gardner, communications director for the National Ski Areas Association, summed up the ski resort mentality: Expansion is necessary, she said, because "it helps mitigate some of the long lines In communications, circuits that are capable of handling transmissions over long distances. . Nobody wants to wait in line for a ski lift:" Go West, Young Man Though many of the nation's most famous ski resorts are in Colorado, their expansionist ex·pan·sion·ism n. A nation's practice or policy of territorial or economic expansion. ex·pan sion·ist adj. & n. tendencies are evident nationwide. Wyoming-based businessman Robert Earl
In February 1990, then-Wasatch-Cache Forest Service Supervisor Dale Bosworth agreed to trade Holding 200 acres of land which was increased to 700 acres later that year. But Holding wanted more. According to the Salt Lake Tribune, numerous Utah politicians put pressure on Forest Service officials. Many were recipients of Holding's campaign contributions. Between 1993 and 1998, according to the newspaper's analysis, Holding and his wife gave nearly $39,500 to members of the Utah congressional delegation and to Gov. Mike Leavitt's election campaigns. Holding also used the 2002 Salt Lake City Winter Olympics as leverage. Holding won $13.8 million in Olympic contracts, and his Snowbasin resort will host the immensely popular downhill and super giant slalom skiing “Super G” redirects here. For other uses, see Super G (disambiguation). The Super Giant Slalom is an alpine skiing discipline. It is usually referred to as Super G races. In the fall of 1995, Rep. James Hansen (R-Utah) and Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) each introduced legislation that did an end run around the Forest Service and authorized the land swap Holding wanted. Though the Clinton administration had some concerns, testified Deputy Forest Service Chief Gray Reynolds, "[it] supports the objective ... to expedite planning and development at the Snowbasin Ski Area in preparation for the 2002 Olympic Winter Games." Congress gave Holding the land in 1996. Along with the 1,320-acre land exchange, there were more sweeteners in the legislation. Congress exempted the first phase of new development of the ski resort--the addition of snowmaking equipment, new lifts, a new restaurant, and other amenities--from a new environmental review. It also implied that a new 3.5-mile road to connect Snowbasin to the state highway would be exempted from an environmental impact study if the Forest Service, rather than Holding, built it. But Forest Service officials said they could not come up with the $15 million needed to build the new road, so in 1998, Sen. Robert Bennett (R-Utah) attached an amendment to an appropriations bill that called for the taxpayers to pay for it. For this effort, the Utah delegation earned a "Porker porker the class of pig judged to be most suitable for conversion to pork. The target age and weight vary too much between localities to make a general statement worthwhile. " award from Rep. Tom Petri (R-Wise.). Pay to Play While Congress was willing to spend $15 million for a new road from Salt Lake City to Snowbasin, it is stingy stin·gy adj. stin·gi·er, stin·gi·est 1. Giving or spending reluctantly. 2. Scanty or meager: a stingy meal; stingy with details about the past. with providing adequate funds for basic Forest Service and BLM recreation needs, such as trail maintenance and toilets. Instead, Congress has decided to ask recreational visitors to pay fees to enter the forests and other wilderness areas. In 1996, it established a recreation-fee demonstration project, the brainchild of an industry group named the American Recreation Coalition (ARC), whose 100 members include Walt Disney, the National Ski Areas Association, and Yamaha Motor Corporation. The project allows federal agencies to keep all of the recreation fees as part of their budgets. As much as 80 percent of those fees may remain with the individual sites where they were collected so that local rangers can use the funds to spruce up outhouses OUTHOUSES. Buildings adjoining to or belonging to dwelling-houses. 2. It is not easy to say what comes within and what is excluded from the meaning of out-house. and make other improvements. In fiscal year 2000, the National Park Service, the National Fish and Wildlife Service, the BLM, and the Forest Service collected $176 million in fees. It's not much compared to the budgetary needs of these agencies, but a new source of income that will only grow if the recreation-fee program is made permanent. Recreation fees may seem sensible, as the people who visit the forests the most pay more for their upkeep. But relying on fees as a major source of cash for the Forest Service creates an unhealthy dynamic. Aside from heavily impacting lower-income citizens, fees create an incentive for the agency to make decisions based not on what is best for the land, but on what will increase the number of visitors to the land. Moving toward a model where forest users are "consumers" buying a "product" challenges the essential nature of public lands. Instead of feeling a sense of stewardship that comes with it, people may start to feel that, because they are paying to use the land, they should get to do whatever they want on it. This is, after all, what has happened with the grazing, mining, and timber industries, whose fees also support the public lands agencies' budgets. Over decades, these industries have paid (albeit a subsidized rate) for what they take from the forests. A pattern was set, and now there is an entrenched en·trench also in·trench v. en·trenched, en·trench·ing, en·trench·es v.tr. 1. To provide with a trench, especially for the purpose of fortifying or defending. 2. belief that because they pay, they deserve what they have always gotten. There is a pointed difference between this attitude and one where using the forests is a privilege bestowed by the public, which owns the land. That sense of entitlement also makes the government's job harder when they make even modest attempts to rein in to check the speed of, or cause to stop, by drawing the reins. to cause (a person) to slow down or cease some activity; - to rein in is used commonly of superiors in a chain of command, ordering a subordinate to moderate or cease some activity deemed excessive. See also: Rein Rein the very people who feed its budget. Yet strapped for cash, the Forest Service is turning to private industry to provide services the agency once managed. Already, about 17,000 private companies operate campgrounds and recreational facilities. But how can the agency maintain its commitment to sustaining the forests and other wild places if it is dependent on those who abuse the land? Businesses exist to turn a profit. If protecting the forest ecosystem does not produce for the bottom line, as the ski industry has demonstrated, then industry will push to modify the agency's environmental policies. The pattern developing for policymaking pol·i·cy·mak·ing or pol·i·cy-mak·ing n. High-level development of policy, especially official government policy. adj. Of, relating to, or involving the making of high-level policy: on recreation on public lands sounds very much like the sort of mutual dependence that developed over the decades between the extractive extractive /ex·trac·tive/ (-tiv) any substance present in an organized tissue, or in a mixture in a small quantity, and requiring extraction by a special method. ex·trac·tive adj. 1. industries (timber, mining, and others) and the government. However, there is an important difference here. The old battles always devolved into an "us" and a "them"--environmentalists or industry. In the fight over recreation, there is only an "us" As someone who has camped and hiked and biked and skied in dozens of national forests and on BLM land and in parks, I know this all too well. There is a real danger in singling out any one group of the recreational community as "bad" There are sure to be many off-roaders who are perfectly content to stay on designated trails and be good environmental citizens, just as the mere act of skiing at a resort does not mean endorsement of the ski areas planned expansion into alpine wetlands or lynx habitat. However, when official off-roader organizations are lining up with the timber, mining, grazing, and other industries to oppose any restriction on their access to public lands, they effectively become as "bad" as those other exploitative industries of old. The same is true for a ski industry that wants praise for endorsing a "sustainable slopes" program but continues to seek greater profits from real estate development that threatens wetlands and wildlife. It doesn't have to be this way. Mountain biking mountain biking Sports medicine A sport in which participants use specialized bicycles to navigate rough, steep trails covered with unforgiving rocks Injury risk Concussions, fractures, death. See Extreme sport, Novelty seeking behavior. can be damaging to the environment if bikers head off trails, through wetlands, and so forth. However, in Colorado, some bicycling organizations have signed on to a set of conservation principles, along with environmental groups, that supports restrictions on where bikers can ride their bikes in the White River National Forest. And when off-roaders complain that environmental protectors are denying them their right to motor across public land, it is important to keep perspective. Clinton's regulation protecting 58 million acres of forests from new roads, after all, applies to less than one-third of national forest lands. In the national forests alone, there are already some 380,000 miles of roads that the agency cannot afford to maintain, the great majority of which are open to off-roaders. More than 90 percent of BLM lands in the lower 48 states remain open to ORVs. Yet off-roader groups consistently oppose any restriction on ORVs, opposing the new roadless regulations, the National Park Service's recent ban on snowmobiling in national parks, and individual forest management plans that limit use to certain trails. The ski industry, meanwhile, already has access to thousands of acres of land and doesn't need any more. This land belongs to all Americans, not just those who can afford to fly to Vail for a ski vacation, or who happen to be lucky enough to live nearby. As more and more people pour into our public lands seeking nature, we need to make sure we don't make a mess of them. If we have to stand in a lift line, or keep to a trail, or pack out our waste, so be it. We owe it the land, and we owe it to future generations. NANCY WATZMAN is research and investigative projects director for Public Campaign. The opinions expressed in this article are her own. This piece was written with an award from The Century Foundation Understanding Government Project. |
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