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The House passed a Pombo(R) mining provision(217 to 215) that now
allows for the sale of most of our national forest and park lands. The bill allows for selling national forest/parkland to mining and real estate companies. Those days of parking along side a national forest stream and fishing where you want are over. What were you doing while congress sold off the best trout streams in the nation? Surprised? I bet. Some of us aren't surprised at all. I suggest every *real* fly fisherman get on the horn the next 10-14 days and let your senators and reps know how you feel about this before the Senate can pass it. This dreadful measure was buried in the budget reconciliation bill, and it is the single worst thing to happen to hunting and fishing in this country in our entire lifetimes. Spread this news to every single person you know, post it on every fly fishing forum you frequent. Sixty million hunters, anglers and families will forever be locked out of their public lands thanks to this measure. It makes ANWR look like a mosquito. This is for the kids. And their kids. And their kids..... Not for these selfish jerks in congress. the appropriate information: TU: November 9, 2005 Dear Member of the House of Representatives: On behalf of Trout Unlimited's 155,000 members nationwide, I am writing to urge you to vote against H.R. 4241, the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 because sections 6201-6207 would allow the sale of public lands from public ownership. These harmful provisions allow public lands to be sold off to mining companies or other development interests for $1000. an acre or the value of the surface of the land (without regard to the value of the subsurface minerals). Many of these lands are crucial for fish, wildlife, and water resources. Public lands are managed in trust by the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management for all the people of the United States, and contain more than half of the nation's blue-ribbon trout streams. They are strongholds for all of the imperiled native trout in the western United States, and contain the best remaining habitat for migrating salmon and steelhead. Trout Unlimited is North America's largest coldwater fisheries conservation organization. Members donated a total of more than 480,000 hours of volunteer time in their communities helping to repair damaged streams and recover watersheds and much of this work takes place on public lands. These harmful provisions were inserted into the bill without any public hearings. Please vote against H.R. 4241. ----------- November 17, 2005 Dear Member of the House of Representatives: We are writing to you on behalf of the tens of millions of hunters and anglers, wildlife professionals, and commercial interests who use and enjoy the great American outdoors. As you know, the House of Representatives is scheduled to vote this week on HR 4241, the House Reconciliation Bill. The Mining sections of this bill (sections 6201-6207) direct the Secretary of Interior to make public lands available for sale to private entities such as, mining companies and other development interests for $1,000 per acre. This action would open these previously public lands to development, fragmentation, habitat loss, and potential pollution. These amendments are harmful to fish, wildlife, and their habitats. Equally important, HR 4241 would reverse a 30-year congressional mandate that public lands remain in public ownership. This action to put public lands on the auction block will not be received well by American citizens. Public lands are managed in trust for all of the people of the United States by federal agencies such as the Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). Public lands contain well more than 50 percent of the nation's blue-ribbon trout streams and are strongholds for imperiled trout and salmon in the western United States. More than 80 percent of the most critical habitat for elk is found on lands managed by the Forest Service and the BLM, alone. Antelope, sage grouse, mule deer, salmon and steelhead, and countless other fish and wildlife species, as well as the nation's hunters and anglers, are similarly dependent on public lands. As more private lands are subdivided or posted, public lands provide the last access for sportsmen who wish to fish, hunt, and camp with their families and friends. That access could be compromised as a result of the Mining sections of the House Reconciliation Bill. As a result, and on behalf of America's sportsmen and women, we ask that you insist on the removal of the Mining sections amendment from HR 4241. Sincerely, Steven Williams Chris Wood President Vice President for Conservation Wildlife Management Institute Trout Unlimited James Mosher Paul Hansen Executive Director Executive Director North American Grouse Partnership Izaak Walton League of America Jim Martin Jim Posewitz Conservation Director Executive Director Berkley Conservation Institute Orion - The Hunters' Institute Mike Beagle Len Vallender Executive Director Chair, Conservation Committee Backcountry Hunters and Anglers Campfire Club of America Evan Hirsche Jim Lyon President Vice President for Conservation --------- http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/...mment-opinions Your birthright, up for grabs For sale cheap: 270 million acres of national forest and public land. It could happen under a budget bill being debated in Congress. By Mike Dombeck ALL MY LIFE, I have introduced people to our nation's public lands, as a seasonal fishing guide in the Upper Midwest, as the head of the Bureau of Land Management and as the chief of the U.S. Forest Service - agencies that manage hundreds of millions of acres of public land. One thing I learned was that Americans love their national forests, parks and grasslands. Americans inherit a birthright that is the envy of the world: hundreds of millions of acres scattered across all regions of the country. The public estate includes famous places, such as Yellowstone National Park, and obscure places that make up picnic spots, fishing holes and weekend getaways. It has been that way for 100 years, thanks to the conservation legacy sparked by President Theodore Roosevelt. Unfortunately, our federal public lands are now under siege in Congress. It seems that some folks simply do not like the idea of the public owning land. These radicals and ideologues are taking advantage of the fact that Americans are preoccupied with economic insecurity, high fuel prices and a war abroad to promote their personal interests by pushing language in the federal budget bill that would put a "for sale" sign on 270 million acres of national forest and other public land. Here's how it would work: Congress would reinstate an obscure, obsolete portion of an 1872 mining law. This would allow mining companies to stake claims on public land and eventually take ownership through a process called "patenting." (Congress, with good reason, stopped allowing patenting in 1994.) But the greed-driven special interest supporters aren't stopping there. They want to expand the sale of public lands to allow any individual or corporation to stake a mining claim and purchase it without having to prove that it contains minerals. This is so broadly defined as to enable developers, for example, to buy federal land at bargain-basement prices and "flip" it quickly for projects such as ski chalets or housing units. The public would never stand for this if it were done in the open, so the provision was tucked inside the huge budget-cutting bill being considered by Congress this week. There, it was obscured by bigger issues, such as offshore drilling. There are plenty of examples of how companies have used the 1872 mining law's patenting provisions to get their hands on public resources dirt cheap. In 1970, Frank Melluzzo "patented" - bought - public land near Phoenix for $150. Ten years later, he sold it for more than $400,000. Today, the Pointe Hilton Hotel in Phoenix sits on this mining claim. In 1983, Mark Hinton patented national forest land adjacent to the Keystone ski resort in Colorado. He later sold the parcel for more than 4,000 times what he paid for it. In 1994, American Barrick Corp. patented about 1,000 acres of public land in Nevada. That land contained more than $10 billion in gold reserves. But under the 1872 mining law, it paid only $5,000 for the land and paid not a dime in royalties to the federal Treasury. No wonder Congress has prohibited such land deals ever since. Taxpayers were getting a raw deal. Now a few folks in Congress want to turn back the clock. The results of these policies will be a fleecing of the American taxpayer and a cheating of future generations of public land. Theodore Roosevelt put it this way: "The nation behaves well if it treats the natural resources as assets which it must turn over to the next generation increased, and not impaired, in value." That kind of leadership is why Roosevelt's face is carved on Mt. Rushmore. The leadership we are seeing in some dark corners of Congress will leave Americans with a much different legacy. ------ National Environmental Trust Statement on the 'House's Massive Public Lands Giveaway' 11/18/2005 8:28:00 AM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://releases.usnewswire.com/redir...snewswire.com/ Contact: Tony Iallonardo of the National Environmental Trust, 202-887-8855 WASHINGTON, Nov. 18 /U.S. Newswire/ -- Following is a statement of Velma Smith, mining campaign director of the National Environmental Trust, regarding the "House's Massive Public Lands Giveaway": "There must be better ways to generate revenue than selling off our national heritage. This is an unprecedented give-away of millions of acres of public lands to special interests at bargain-basement prices. "Removing arctic drilling earlier this month didn't turn this bill green -- it was already the color of money. It is a massive public lands giveaway to the oil, drilling and real estate industries. "These are sweeping public policy changes jammed into a bill that is supposed to be about giving the nation a budget. Lawmakers should strip these provisions. Liquidating your property to buy lavish sweetheart gifts is never smart, and in this case, nothing short of shameless." More Information: Conservation groups say the House Resources Committee's budgetary language related to hardrock mining is a full scale rewrite of federal mining law and worse, a massive public lands giveaway to special interests. The provisions are tucked into the massive House budget reconciliation that passed overnight, and moves on to a conference committee with Senate negotiators. Conservationists say if House Resources Chairman Richard Pombo is appointed to that committee by House Republican leadership, the provision has a reasonably high likelihood of becoming law. The provisions end a decade-long Congressional ban on "patenting" or sale of public lands claimed for mining and creates a new policy of offering vast areas of Western public lands for sale for non-mining uses like real estate development and oil drilling. Under the bill, U.S. and foreign corporations will be able to buy and develop important natural areas now used for recreation, wildlife, fisheries or regional drinking water supplies -- including areas within our National Parks, National Forests, and BLM lands. The proposal updates prices for the land surface from those of 1872, when President grant signed the original mining law, but it disregards the value of the minerals associated with those lands and prohibits the government from charging royalties for the taxpayers who own these lands, as it has traditionally done. The bill also allows the resale of these lands to oil, real estate and other interests. While the provision's primary backer, Rep. Richard Pombo, says it will raise some $150 million over 5 years, it in fact sells public assets for far less than their value, and it raises less than half the revenue that could be raised by imposing a royalty fee on hardrock minerals taken from federal lands. While hardrock mining companies, the only extractive industries still governed by the antiquated law, do not now pay royalties or lease fees to the federal government; businesses extracting oil and gas, coal and other commodities from public lands do make payments to the federal treasury. If these businesses take advantage of the new Pombo sale language, they will avoid such payments by purchasing land outright. For more information, visit http://www.bettermines.org and http://www.net.org. ------------ -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/oct2...5-10-26-03.asp Pombo Would Sell Federally Protected Lands to Mining Companies WASHINGTON, DC, October 26, 2005 (ENS) - The House Resources Committee is set to vote today on a budget measure that would give mining corporations control over much of America's federal public land. The budget reconciliation proposal put forward by Resources Committee Chairman Richard Pombo, a California Republican, would allow foreign and U.S. mining corporations to buy millions of acres of public lands in the West, including land in national parks, wilderness and other protected areas. In addition, the proposal would undercut budget deficit reduction by prohibiting the federal government from imposing royalties on minerals and metals removed from public lands. Under the 1872 Mining Law, mining companies can buy public land for $2.50 or $5 an acre. This land sale, known as a patent, gives companies absolute title to the property. In August 1995, President Bill Clinton called for a moratorium on further mining patents on about 19,000 federally owned acres in the area of Yellowstone National Park. Since then, there has been a moratorium on this practice, passed in the Interior Appropriations bill each year. Congressman Richard Pombo was sworn in to his seventh term in the House of Representatives in January 2005. He represents California's 11th Congressional District, including San Joaquin, Alameda, Contra Costa and Santa Clara Counties. (Photo courtesy Office of the Congressman) Under Pombo's proposal, mining companies would once again be able to buy public land, this time for $1,000 an acre - still far below the true value of the mineral rich land. Once a patent is granted, officials say, the Mining Law does not permit them to challenge a company if it decides not to mine a site that could be resold as real estate. The committee's ranking Democrat, Congressman Nick Rahall who represents the mining state of West Virginia, proposed a permanent end to such patents. But if the patent moratorium is repealed, treasured places throughout the West could be permanently removed from America's system of public lands, said Lauren Pagel, legislative coordinator at Earthworks, a Washington, DC based nonprofit organization that aims to protect communities and the environment from the destructive impacts of mineral development, in the United States and worldwide. The fate of rivers and streams running through these lands, providing water for agriculture and municipalities, will be left largely to mining companies to determine, warned Earthworks, as will the health of wildlife and game habitat. Americans who hunt, fish, hike, and recreate in these areas will be permanently denied the access they now have, Pagel said. ASARCO, a copper mining company, has asked that over 400 acres be removed from the Ironwood National Monument near Tucson, Arizona. The Sierra Club says this land is a prime birthing area for the last viable population of desert bighorn sheep in Pima County. (Photo courtesy Sierra Club) The Pombo proposal would remove the current minimal requirement that corporations must show that they have found valuable mineral deposits on public land before they can buy it, so it would open up far more land for purchase than allowed even by the 1872 Mining Law. "This is the great un-American land grab of 2005," said Allen Rosenfeld, a senior advisor for the Westerners for Responsible Mining campaign. "Pombo's measure could encourage the largest liquidation of America's public lands since the Homestead Act of 1862," said Rosenfeld. "Instead of trail head markers and open access to lakes and streams, outdoor enthusiasts will be confronted by an unwanted epidemic of 'no trespassing' signs." The proposal would be a windfall for foreign and domestic mining interests that already have staked mining claims covering more than 5.5 million acres of federal land. The National Mining Association (NMA), an industry group, says, "Many of this nation's minerals are found on federal lands that comprise 38 percent of the combined land area of the 11 western states where most minerals and metals mining occurs. National policy affecting the availability and use of federal lands has significant implications for whether or not these important resources are developed." The mining industry argues that even though the United States has reserves of 78 important mined minerals, the country "has become increasingly reliant on foreign sources of minerals for products that are strategically important to our national and economic security." The NMA cites 2004 figures compiled by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) that show the United States is now 100 percent import dependent on 17 major minerals. Since 1993, U.S. reliance on imported sources of minerals has increased seven-fold, the USGS says. Over the same period, the U.S. share of worldwide minerals exploration dollars has declined in part because public policies have made exploration and development in the United States too inefficient and unpredictable to attract sufficient investments, the NMA said. "We need a National Minerals Policy that ensures a fair, predictable and efficient legal and regulatory climate and fosters production of minerals that are the foundation of our economy," said the mining association. Last year, more than 45,560 new mining claims were recorded by the U.S. Department of the Interior covering up to 910,000 acres of federal public lands in the West - a fourfold increase since 2001. This surge in claim staking, which is being fueled by recent high prices for gold and other metals, is expected to continue. "This is highway robbery," said Cathy Carlson, policy advisor to Earthworks. "And the victims are the nation's taxpayers and millions of Americans who hunt, fish, hike and make a livelihood from federal lands in the West." "If the congressman were truly interested in raising money from the mining industry to reduce the federal deficit," said Carlson, "he would better serve the public's interest by imposing a first-ever royalty on the value of minerals and metals taken from public land." Two patented mining claims on nine acres adjoining U.S. Forest Service land near Creede, Colorado are on the market for $70,000. (Photo courtesy Broken Arrow Ranch & Land) An eight percent royalty on the value of extracted minerals, similar to what other extractive industries pay, would yield more than twice as much federal revenue, about $350 million in five years, as the $155 million Pombo estimates his proposal would raise. Mining is the only extractive industry operating on public lands that does not pay any federal royalty, but the Pombo proposal would explicitly prohibit royalties from being derived from metals and minerals extracted from mines on federal land. If a royalty were imposed by future legislation, patented land would be excluded since it would be privately owned. Pagel called the Pombo proposal "nothing more than a $1,000 per acre Trojan horse designed to dupe Congress into giving away public access to America's special places." A group of citizens of the 11th Congressional District of California who are "appalled" to have Pombo as their Congressional Representative ahve set up website called Vote Pombo Out.org. They say Pombo "has proven himself a right-wing extremist with a radical conservative social agenda. His record and views on the environment are particularly disturbing." They say Pombo is working to, "sell off our public lands to mining companies, overturn the Endangered Species Act, restart commercial whaling, see intensive logging of our national forests, gut the Clear Air and Clean Water acts, allow drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, and overturn bans on highly toxic pesticides." ------------ |
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