By Andy Kerr
As conservationists, ecologists, economists,
and others began to turn their attention to the
Oregon Desert, all soon realized that if the goal
of conserving and restoring the web of life
(biodiversity) in the desert bioregion for this
and future generations was to be met, that it
would take an act of Congress. The goals of the
proposed Oregon Desert Conservation Act (ODCA)
are to ensure that:
- The desert ecosystem would function
across the landscape and over time.
- The primary provider of conservation
would be public land, not private land.
- Government spending would be done in the
most efficient manner possible.
- Local affected interests would be treated
justly.
Combining their collective knowledge of the
Oregon Desert with the principles of conservation
biology, they set to work. First, de facto
wilderness lands were inventoried. These lands
qualify under the definition of wilderness as set
forth in the Wilderness Act of 1964:
A wilderness, in contrast with those areas
where man and his own works dominate the
landscape, is hereby recognized as an area where
the earth and its community of life are
untrammeled by man, where man himself is a
visitor who does not remain. An area of
wilderness is further defined to mean in this Act
an area of undeveloped Federal land retaining its
primeval character and influence, without
permanent improvements or human habitation, which
is protected and managed to preserve its natural
conditions and which (1) generally appears to
have been affected primarily by the forces of
nature, with the imprint of man's work
substantially unnoticeable; (2) has outstanding
opportunities for solitude or a primitive and
unconfined type of recreation; (3) has at least
five thousand acres of land or is of sufficient
size as to make practicable its preservation and
use in an unimpaired condition; and (4) may also
contain ecological, geological or other features
of scientific, educational, scenic or historical
values.
The 1964 law required the Forest Service, the
National Park Service, and the Fish and Wildlife
Service to review their holdings and make
recommendations to Congress. The Bureau of Land
Management was not required to review its lands
until passage of the Federal Lands Policy and
Management Act (FLPMA) of 1976. That law gave the
agency until 1991 to complete the task.
Controversy immediately plagued the BLM's
wilderness review process. The first task of the
agency was designating wilderness study areas,
areas of wilderness quality that would be managed
"so as not to impair suitability" as
wilderness "until Congress has determined
otherwise."
To determine roadless areas, the agency first
had to determine the roads. BLM took their
definition of a road from the official report of
the House of Representatives that accompanied
FLPMA:
An access route which has been improved and
maintained by using hand or power machinery or
tools to ensure relatively regular and continuous
use. A way maintained solely by the passage of
vehicles does not constitute a road.
An adequate definition, but the devil is in
those details. In many cases, BLM misapplied the
definition. However, it is in the gray area.
After determining the road network, BLM
analyzed the areas between the "roads."
If the area was five thousand acres or greater
(criterion #3 in the Wilderness Act definition),
BLM then determined whether the area was
generally natural (criterion #1). If it wasn't,
the area was dropped.
Much of the debate around wilderness
designations has centered on the issue of roads.
A designated wilderness area is an area without
roads, and no mechanized uses are allowed. Humans
and their machines have been nearly everywhere.
We've all experienced motorcraft in the most
surprising and/or inappropriate places. Those
humans who love machines more than nature will
argue that any discernible evidence of vehicle
use constitutes a road (especially if they have
the rig for it).
Proponents readily concede that several of the
proposed wilderness areas in the Oregon Desert
Conservation Act contain what all would agree are
"roads," albeit of a low standard. As
livestock grazing diminishes, for example, the
only significant purpose of such roads no longer
exists.
Rather than engage in interminable debates
with bureaucrats over the shade of gray,
conservationists asked, "Does the road have
any legitimate purpose?" Fortunately,
Congress is the final arbiter. On occasion,
Congress has designated wilderness with a paved
road in it (later removed). There was no longer
any need (if there ever was) for the road.
USGS 7.5' series quadrangle maps distinguish
five kinds of routes:
Paved: further distinguished as
"primary" or "secondary,"
depending on their construction
Improved: engineered, constructed,
surfaced (but not with pavement), and/or
drained
Unimproved: dirt, possibly having
been passed over with a bulldozer blade
Jeep trail: a track established and
maintained by use
Trail: pedestrian, or at least not
four-wheeled motorcraft
BLM's wilderness inventory was done before
most of the desert was mapped at the 7.5' scale,
so the inventory did not have benefit of the USGS
analysis. Conservationists generally draw the
line between "improved" and
"unimproved" as defining a
"road."
If an area was roadless and generally natural,
BLM then determined if it had outstanding
opportunities for primitive recreation and/or
solitude (criterion #2). In particular, this is
where BLM disqualified millions of acres of
Oregon de facto wilderness land from designated
wilderness consideration. BLM interpreted this
provision much more narrowly and arbitrarily than
did the Forest Service, National Park Service,
and Fish and Wildlife Service. These agencies
assumed that an area that was generally natural
and of sufficient size by definition had
outstanding opportunities for solitude and/or
primitive recreation.
Finally, BLM didn't let other supplemental
wilderness values (criterion #4) influence its
decision of whether to designate a wilderness
study area.
BLM eventually designated 2,806,598 acres in
Oregon as wilderness study areas. In 1991, they
recommended less than half of these--1,278,073
acres--to Congress for wilderness designation.
(Since then, as a result of land acquisition, BLM
has identified two new wilderness study areas,
totaling 38,920 acres. No recommendation has been
made.)
In contrast, conservationists determined that
over 6.1 million acres of wilderness-qualified
lands are present in the Oregon Desert. [See Oregon Conservation Act
Tables] These lands are the twenty-six
proposed wilderness areas described in this book.
To provide for better integrity and long-term
management, in drawing the proposed boundaries,
certain presently nonconforming lands and roads
were included. Over time, they will naturally
rehabilitate.
Wilderness designation, while the most
essential and most important land conservation
tool, isn't adequate to fully protect the Oregon
Desert. Certain lands, while of a non-wilderness
character, are nonetheless of critical ecological
importance.
ODCA would establish or expand several new
units of the national park system and the
national wildlife refuge system. These units
would be managed by the National Park Service and
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service respectively,
because of their respective expertise in managing
people and wildlife. The legislation would also
establish the Steens Mountain and Lower Owyhee
National Conservation Areas, both managed by the
Bureau of Land Management. Where possible, the
acreage inside all these special management areas
also include designated wilderness and wild and
scenic rivers.
The wilderness and other special management
areas proposed in ODCA comprise the core of
ecological protection. Both to provide connecting
corridors between the large reserves and to
protect and restore ecological values associated
with them, ODCA would designate several hundred
miles of additions to the national wild and
scenic rivers system, to be managed under the
Wild and Scenic Rivers Act of 1968. ODCA would
specify expansion of the protective river
corridor from an average of 1/2 mile in width to
an average of 1 mile in width, following the
precedent of the Elkhorn Creek Wild and Scenic
River, designated in 1996 as part of legislation
designed to protect the ancient forests of Opal
Creek in Oregon's western Cascade Mountains.
ODCA would also require that--within three
years--the Fish and Wildlife Service, with the
cooperation of the Forest Service, the National
Park Service, and the Bureau of Land Management,
to report to Congress on:
1. What additional measures and actions
are necessary to conserve, protect, and
restore the biological diversity of the
Oregon Desert across the landscape and over
time.
2. Recommendations on the reintroduction
of extirpated plant, fish, and wildlife
species and the control or elimination of
exotic plants and animals.
3. Natural communities and ecosystems as
they originally and currently exist.
4. The state of Pacific salmon within the
Oregon Desert and steps desirable and
necessary to improve their numbers and
health.
The biggest and most vexing problem is what to
do about livestock grazing in the wilderness and
special management areas. Such must end if the
web of life is to be maintained and restored. Yet
it must be done fairly. ODCA would require that
livestock permittees on federal land be fairly
compensated when their grazing permits in the
Oregon Desert are reduced or retired.
Presently under the Wilderness Act, any
grazing that was occurring at the time of
wilderness designation is permitted to continue.
This was a political compromise with the
livestock industry at the time of the act's
passage in 1964. The livestock industry appears
to have broken their promise in the compromise by
opposing every wilderness bill since then. While
the Wilderness Act allows for a certain degree of
regulation to ensure that grazing arrangements
maintain "wilderness values," it is, in
fact, impossible to simultaneously and fully
conserve "wilderness values" and to
allow any continued livestock grazing. If cattle
continue to dominate and degrade the desert
landscape, the overall quality of the ecosystems
will not improve, the rare or endangered plants
and animals will not be protected, and the
quality of hiking and hunting will not be
enriched.
ODCA would do several other important things:
Designate the Desert Trail in
Oregon as a scenic trail in the national
trails system and provide for a 1-mile wide
protective corridor.
Prohibit cyanide heap leach mining
anywhere in the Oregon Desert.
Prohibit military overflights under
10,000 feet above wilderness, wild and scenic
rivers, and special management areas.
Authorize acquisition of valid
mineral claims at fair market value in
wilderness, wild and scenic rivers, national
wildlife refuges, national monuments, and
national conservation areas.
Authorize economic and other
assistance to small communities and
individuals in transition.
ODCA would hopefully result in the eventual
acquisition of approximately 373,161 acres of
primarily undeveloped lands with ecological
values that are presently in private ownership.
These lands could be acquired in a variety of
ways, depending on the land designation and
wishes of the owner.
Acquisition methods could include:
Donation. The owner of the property
could donate it to the federal government and
take a tax deduction.
Willing seller. The federal government
would buy the land from the landowner at a
mutually agreed upon price.
Exchange. The federal government and
the owner of the parcel in question would
exchange for a equally valued parcel elsewhere.
Eminent domain As a last resort, the
use of eminent domain would be allowed in units
of the national park system and national wildlife
refuge system and the two national conservation
areas. Such use would be allowed under
restrictions commonly imposed by Congress in land
protection legislation. Condemnation is not
allowed in the wilderness system in the West or
in the wild and scenic rivers system, where 50
percent or more of the lands are already in
federal ownership. Condemnation of state lands
would not be allowed.
Life estate. In this option, the land
would be acquired by the federal government, but
the owners would be free to live out their lives
on the property. (Extremely little of the private
acreage proposed for acquisition for public
purposes has anyone living on it.)
144,324 acres of state lands are also targeted
for protection in ODCA.
Environmental Benefits of ODCA
Maintenance and restoration of
biological diversity of several endangered
ecosystems.
Protection in a natural state of
nearly 7.2 million acres for this and future
generations.
Reduction in the rate of species
extinction.
Elimination of off{en}road-vehicle
damage in fragile areas.
Elimination of the threat posed by
cyanide heap leach mining and other
destructive mineral exploitation.
Prohibition of a geothermal power
plant at the base of Steens Mountain and
prevention of the possible extinction of
federally listed endangered species.
Recovery and restoration of
riparian areas to the great benefit of fish
(including Pacific salmon stocks) and
wildlife.
Restoration of watershed health
(including water quality and quantity and
other environmental values), resulting in
increased stream flows, especially during dry
months.
Significant improvement of bighorn
sheep, pronghorn, Rocky Mountain elk, sage
grouse, and other game numbers.
Increased scientific study and
education opportunities.
Reduction of carbon dioxide
contributions to global warming.
Economic Benefits of ODCA
Opportunities to diversify local
economies by establishment of new businesses,
such as tourist facilities (guides and
outfitters, bed and breakfasts, restaurants,
lodgings, and so forth).
Reduction of government subsidies
to a small group of livestock operators.
Increased streamflow for downstream
uses.
More efficient production of red
meat (emphasis of native over exotic species)
as protein source.
Recreation and Tourism Benefits of ODCA
Outstanding wilderness recreation
opportunities.
Superior hunting and fishing.
Highly scenic motorized (on-road)
recreation.
Maintenance of a high-quality
Desert Trail experience.
What are the political chances for enactment
of the Oregon Desert Conservation Act? In the
beginning: zero. But that is no different from
the history of any major piece of federal
conservation legislation.
The proper question is: Can the political
support be gained and the political opposition
overcome to enact the Oregon Desert Conservation
Act? The answer is: With proper leadership,
adequate resources, and enough time,
"Yes!"
2000 by The Larch Company, L.L.C. Text
reprinted with permission from Oregon Desert
Guide: 70 Hikes by Andy Kerr, published by
The Mountaineers, Seattle, WA.
Oregon
Conservation Act Tables
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