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Entries For: September 2006

L.A. Times Op-Ed on Science and the Endangered Species Act

by Jacob Smith on Friday, September 15, 2006

Black Canyon Wins Protection for Future Generations

by Jacob Smith on Friday, September 15, 2006

A huge shout-out to our friends at Western Resource Advocates, Trout Unlimited, High Country Citizens Alliance, and a bunch of others for winning a critical lawsuit protecting water in Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park.  Center for Native Ecosystems wasn’t involved, but our Board of Directors President, Bart Miller of WRA (along with TU legal eagle Drew Peternell) led the stellar legal team.

The ruling blocks the federal government from giving away the Black Canyon’s long-standing reserved water right to Front Range developers, meaning the water will stay in the Black Canyon where it belongs.  This is good for endangered fish, it’s good for game fish, it’s good for the Gunnison River, and it’s good for the many people on Colorado’s Western Slope who don’t much care for the Front Range grabbing their water.  The ruling also established an important precedent about the government’s responsibility to protect the water in National Parks around the country. 

We’ve got a special fondness for the Black Canyon because it’s so spectacular, but we are also fond of it because it sits in the middle of the Gunnison Basin, a region that Center for Native Ecosystems is working to protect.  Our campaign to protect and recover the Gunnison sage grouse is the centerpiece.

The story got good press in a bunch of papers including the Montrose Daily Press and the Rocky Mountain News, and Coyote Gulch blogged about it yesterday.

Kudos to Bart, Drew, and the rest of the folks that made it happen.

A Torch is Passed

by Jacob Smith on Wednesday, September 13, 2006

One of Colorado's conservation heroes - Dottie Fox - passed away on Monday morning.  Dottie was a tremendous champion of protecting wilderness in Colorado and elsewhere.  We are deeply saddened but also inspired by her spirit and legacy.  As always, we know that we stand on the shoulders of giants.

Bert Fingerhut had a good letter this morning in the Aspen Daily News.

The scoop on Bush administration's 'Cooperative Conservation' agenda

by Brian Hires on Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Speak up for Our Nation’s Environmental Protections

Attend the Cooperative Conservation Listening Session in Colorado Springs this Friday September 15th.

The Bush administration is asking our advice on how to best protect our nation’s land, waters and wildlife.  They are holding a series of “listening sessions” across the country to get people’s input on cooperative conservation projects, including one  scheduled for this Friday September 15th  in Colorado Springs.  (See below for more details)

The Cooperative Conservation listening tour is an opportunity to speak out in support of the Endangered Species Act, Clean Water Act, Clean Air Act and other environmental laws.  Please attend a session near you to speak in support of strong protections for our nation’s wildlands and wildlife.  

If you’ve been involved in a local cooperative effort to protect endangered species, you can speak from personal experience about how environmental protections brought people in your community together to conserve natural resources.

The Bush administration’s hidden agenda behind these events is to build momentum to weaken our nation’s critical environmental laws.  They’ve already proposed a package of “Cooperative Conservation Legislation” that would weaken the Endangered Species Act and Clean Water Act.

Please tell them that you support strong environmental laws, including the Endangered Species Act, Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act and forest protection laws and that you do not want to see them weakened or replaced by voluntary programs.

The future of our nation’s environmental laws is in your hands.  Please attend a listening session to show your support for the Endangered Species Act. 
 
You can submit written comments via email at: Beth_Duff@ios.doi.gov.   It would be particularly good to share your personal stories on local conservation efforts in your community.

 Bush Administration Cooperative Conservation Listening Tour
 
The Secretaries of Interior, Commerce and Agriculture, the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, and the Chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality have announced the dates and locations of the first eight listening sessions on cooperative conservation and environmental partnerships. These sessions are the first of at least two dozen to be held around the country.

  • Colorado Springs, Colorado, 9 a.m., September 15, 2006, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs, University Center Gymnasium

Fact sheets on 'Good Samaritan Act' and 'Healthy Forests Partnership Act' - parts of the Administration's Cooperative Conservation agenda.


 Suggested Talking Points on Cooperative Conservation

  • America ’s conservation laws, like the Endangered Species Act and Clean Water Act, have paved the way for cooperative conservation by setting goals for recovering endangered species and cleaning up the nation’s rivers and waterways.
  • The Bush Administration wants to dismantle the very laws that brought people and communities together to address local conservation needs. By moving to weaken the Endangered Species Act, the Administration is undermining cooperative conservation.
  • Cooperative conservation is an important new tool for recovering endangered species but is not a substitute for the vital safety net the Endangered Species Act provides for animals, fish and plants that are on the brink of extinction.
  • Every species needs a home. Scientists tell us over and over that for a species to recover, it needs a place to live.   The Endangered Species Act is the most effective tool we have to protect the habitat needed for recovery of endangered fish, plants and wildlife.

Colorado Halts Springtime Prairie Dog Shooting on Public Lands

by Josh Pollock on Thursday, September 07, 2006

Today the Colorado Wildlife Commission voted to close public lands in Colorado to all prairie dog shooting between March 1st and June 15th.  Now Wyoming is the only state within the white-tailed prairie dog's range to allow unrestricted recreational target shooting of prairie dogs while they are breeding and nursing their pups (Montana closed federal lands to white-tailed prairie dog shooting year-round beginning in 2002, and Utah adopted April 1st-June 15th closures on public lands back in 2003).  Center for Native Ecosystems has asked the Commission to set limits on white-tailed prairie dog shooting for the past four years, and we congratulate the Commission for finally taking this commonsense action.  As the Provo Daily Herald wrote when Utah adopted its seasonal closure,  "The least we can do is leave the critters alone while they raise their young."  (April 12, 2004)

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