Look West: Public lands and energy news from the Center for Western Priorities

Protections for 16 million acres of public land are languishing in Congress

Monday, November 21, 2022
Languishing Lands, Center for Western Priorities

This is a special edition of Look West featuring a new report from the Center for Western Priorities. Look West will be off the rest of this week for Thanksgiving. 

A new report from the Center for Western Priorities finds that bills to protect over 16 million acres of public land in the West are currently languishing in Congress. Protecting these landscapes would bring the nation closer to achieving the goal of conserving 30 percent of public lands and waters by 2030, a scientifically-driven priority backed by the Biden administration.

Despite incredibly strong and enduring support for conservation actions, worsening partisan gridlock has caused progress on conservation to grind to a halt. Over the decade from 2000 to 2010, Congress protected 9.5 million acres of lands through legislation. The next decade, from 2011 to 2021, Congress protected just 3.3 million acres, one-third of what had been protected the previous decade. This has not been for a lack of effort—many bills have been introduced and several have passed the House, some of them multiple times, only to stall out in the Senate.

This report, titled Languishing Lands, details a selection of landscapes that have been proposed for protection, including the greater Grand Canyon region and the Great Bend of the Gila in Arizona, the Ruby Mountains in Nevada, Castner Range in Texas, and the Owyhee Canyonlands in Oregon. The President has a clear opportunity to deliver for the communities that have worked hard to craft broadly-supported proposals, and should not hesitate to exercise the authority that the Antiquities Act gives him for exactly this purpose.

“Westerners overwhelmingly support public lands conservation and are eager to see President Biden take action to protect iconic landscapes across the West. This report shows how executive action can rescue popular conservation proposals that are stalled in Congress,” said Center for Western Priorities Policy Director Rachael Hamby.
 

READ THE REPORT

Quote of the day
”Communities, tribes, scientists, and lawmakers have worked tirelessly on all of these conservation proposals, and they deserve to see these sites and landscapes protected after years or even decades of persistent effort. President Biden has the power to bypass our dysfunctional Congress and protect millions of acres that are currently at risk of mining, drilling, and other forms of degradation. There’s no time to wait.”
—Center for Western Priorities Policy Director Rachael Hamby on legislation to protect 16 million acres of public land currently languishing in Congress
Picture this

@Interior

"A national trail is a gateway into nature’s secret beauties, a portal to the past, a way into solitude and community. It is also an inroad to our national character. Our trails are both irresistible and indispensable." —Stewart Lee Udall, Secretary of the Interior (1961–69)
Twitter
Facebook
Medium
Instagram
Copyright © 2022 Center for Western Priorities, All rights reserved.
You've signed up to receive Look West updates.

Center for Western Priorities
1999 Broadway
Suite 520
Denver, CO 80202

Add us to your address book

View this on the web

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list