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Article Published: Tuesday, November 04, 2003
Court takes wilderness off-road case http://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,...742448,00.html By Joey Bunch, Denver Post Environment Writer A U.S. Supreme Court decision Monday to review a Utah case could put a chill on the public's ability to force the government to protect wilderness, according to Colorado environmental leaders. The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver ruled last year that the Bureau of Land Management must protect from damage by off-road vehicles five areas under consideration for wilderness protections. The Bush administration appealed on the grounds that the public should not be able to sue a federal agency over how it performs its day-to-day role. U.S. Solicitor General Theodore Olson argued in his appeal that the courts should not "entertain challenges to anything and everything that an agency may do, or fail to do, in the conduct of its business." Advertisement Jim Angell, a lawyer with the Denver regional office of Earthjustice and the lead attorney in the case, said Bush is, in effect, telling the public to butt out, and not just when it comes to off-road vehicles. "The administration is not interested in having the public be able to enforce environmental laws, or any other laws," when it comes to government agencies, he said, "and this is a way to close the courthouse doors to the public." Suzanne Jones, the Denver-based regional director for the Wilderness Society, said the administration's move is consistent with its position on wilderness. In September, the administration issued a new policy ordering the Bureau of Land Management to give equal consideration to the commercial value of public land before setting it aside as protected wilderness. That decision could open up about 600,000 acres in Colorado for all-terrain vehicles, oil and gas drilling, grazing and other uses. Jones said Colorado already has many wilderness areas that have been scarred by dirt bikes and other off-road vehicles, including public land near Palisades, Brown's Canyon near Salida and Little Bookcliff near Grand Junction. The Blue Ribbon Coalition, a Western pro-land-use group, and other organizations had also asked the court to reconsider the 10th Circuit ruling, and will likely support the government's argument. Paul Turcke, an attorney for the coalition, said the environmentalists' argument would enable groups to sue the government if they don't like an agency's decision, regardless of the rationale behind it. The Associated Press contributed to this report _________________ |
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