U.S. Lawmakers Conduct Hearing
In Utah To Consider Banning Motorized Vehicles
From More Than 9 Million Acres
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The
U.S. House subcommittee hearing took place
on October 1st |
Pickerington, OH (10/3/2009)
- AMA staff was on-site to
monitor a U.S. House subcommittee hearing on Oct.
1, on a measure aimed at banning off-highway motorcycles
and all-terrain vehicles (ATV) from one-sixth of
the state of Utah.
The Subcommittee on National Parks, Forests and
Public Lands, chaired by Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-Ariz.),
held the hearing to consider H.R. 1925, the America's
Red Rock Wilderness Act of 2009. The proposal
would close off 9.4 million acres of Utah's public
land to motorcycles, ATVs and bicycles, and would
even restrict horseback riding. Popular off-highway
vehicle riding areas included in the legislation
are Moab, the San Rafael Swell and Chimney Rock,
among others.
The legislation was first introduced 20 years
ago by then-Rep. Wayne Owens (D-Utah). Owens sought
a Wilderness designation for 5 million acres.
Under a Wilderness designation, no vehicles, including
motorcycles, ATVs or even bicycles, are allowed
on affected public land.
The latest legislation was introduced by Rep.
Maurice Hinchey (D-N.Y.), who has been introducing
similar bills to create Wilderness in Utah since
1994. He has done so over the protest of Utah's
congressional delegation and governor, who have
fought the proposals, saying that the land Hinchey
has proposed for Wilderness doesn't even meet
the Wilderness definition because it includes
roads and developments. Additionally, they argue,
the creation of more Wilderness would hurt local
economies.
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Left
to right: U.S. Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah),
U.S. Sen. Robert Bennett (R-Utah) |
Left
to right: Bennett, U.S. Rep. Jim Matheson
(D-Utah) |
"We can find a balanced approach to land
management that meets the needs of preservation,
energy production, recreation and multiple use,
but this bill doesn't do that," said Rep.
Rob Bishop (R-Utah), who's shown in the above
photo. "This flawed bill is a top-down approach
that would arbitrarily lock up huge portions of
our state, and it doesn't even fit the definition
of Wilderness. Thankfully, it is not supported
by a single federally elected official in the
state."
"We need to protect public land for the people,
not from the people," said Ed Moreland, AMA
vice president for government relations. "There's
absolutely no reason to shut out those who enjoy
responsible motorized recreation, including bicyclists,
the handicapped who enjoy the outdoors on ATVs,
and others. This is simply another land grab pushed
by anti-access groups who want to close land access
to motorcycle and ATV riders and their families,
as well as bicyclists."
Proponents of the Wilderness bill argue that proposed
restrictions would be discussed, reviewed and
debated in congressional committees, and then
the full Congress. But Moreland noted that recent
history proves that isn't always the case.
For example, earlier this year, Congress fast-tracked
a 1,300-page bill that President Obama then signed
into law to designate Wilderness in some 2 million
acres in several states nationwide. That legislation,
the Omnibus Public Land Management Act of 2009,
was a combination of more than 160 bills, and
some lawmakers complained that they had never
even seen almost half of them, let alone debated
them, nor had time to get constituent input on
them.
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U.S.
Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah) |
Robert
V. Abbey, Director, Bureau of Land Management
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"There are already mechanisms in place at
the local level to manage this public land in
the best interests of all users," Moreland
said. "There is simply no reason to dismantle
that. Decisions about the disposition of lands
in Utah should not exclude the residents and representatives
who call Utah home."
All riders who want to take action on Wilderness
proposals in Congress can contact their federal
lawmakers in the Issues
& Legislation section of the website.
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Fighting
for your Rights

All Terrain Vehicle Association
P.O. Box 800
Pickerington, OH 43147-0800 |
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