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Field Notes


Bipartisan poll: Western voters want environmental protection


Photo by Jeff Vanuga

Nearly 70 percent think the environment is fragile and must be protected.

From the Wyoming Tribune Eagle:

February 24, 2011

New bipartisan poll said that 69 percent of the 2,200 residents surveyed think the environment is fragile.

By Josh Mitchell
jmitchell@wyomingnews.com

CHEYENNE — Voters in five western states, including Wyoming, have a strong interest in preserving the environment, according to new bipartisan poll results released Wednesday.

The majority of respondents, 69 percent, think that the environment is fragile and must be protected.

Most of the voters also said that funding to protect the environment must be maintained despite budget problems facing many states.

Click here to read the full story.

Field Notes


Bighorn Basin juried art exhibit travels to the Capitol

The “Public Lands, Personal Visions” juried art exhibit, on display at Northwest College in the fall of 2010. This exhibit has traveled to Cheyenne for the legislative session.

By Jamie Wolf

A POPULAR JURIED ART EXHIBIT that displayed this fall in Northwest College in Powell has traveled to Cheyenne and is on display for the final two weeks of the legislative session.

The exhibit—called Public Lands, Personal Visions—features artwork in a variety of media from artists who live, work, and play in Wyoming’s spectacular Bighorn Basin.

The artwork can be viewed, for free, from approximately 7 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, until March 4, in the corridor gallery between the Herschler and Capitol buildings in Cheyenne, at 122 W 25th ST.

The corridor gallery is open to the public while the legislature is in session.

The purpose of the show is to inspire a visual dialogue about individuals’ myriad relationships with the public lands of the Bighorn Basin.

The show was so well received locally that we felt that others from around the state, including state-level decision makers, should have the opportunity to enjoy it, too.

The federal government is currently revising its plan for managing public lands in the Bighorn Basin. Click here the learn more, including how to participate in the plan revision process.

Contact: Jamie Wolf, Wyoming Outdoor Council outreach coordinator, (307) 721-7610, jamie@wyomingoutdoorcouncil.org

Field Notes


Up and running again: Shoshone National Forest planning process

Photo by Jeff Vanuga

Stalled plan is back on track

By Lisa McGee

THE SHOSHONE NATIONAL FOREST IS RESTARTING THE PROCESS of revising its management plan, and will hold a series of public meetings in late February and early March to discuss the revision.

As many readers know, the Shoshone’s forest plan revision has been on hold for a while.

The process originally began in 2005 but the U.S. Forest Service conducted that work under rules that are no longer valid.

So the agency is starting over, while attempting to incorporate some of the work and public comments it previously received.

Safeguarding important landscapes

The Forest Service is now beginning a new round of meetings to discuss this plan revision, this time working under legally sound regulations.

There is a new forest supervisor and a new forest planner heading up the work. The plan, when final, will guide the management of the forest for the next 15 to 20 years.

It is important to note that the Bureau of Land Management is also concurrently revising its two management plans for public lands in the Wind River Basin and the Bighorn Basin.

So folks who participate in all of these plan revisions are helping set the stage for 20 years worth of management of the Shoshone National Forest, its margins, its surrounding landscapes to the east, and the gateway to the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.

There are currently two drilling proposals pending on the Shoshone National Forest outside of the towns of Clark and Dubois.

These projects have drawn criticism as they are located on land prized for high quality wildlife habitat and backcountry recreation. The Forest Service has responded that these areas were made available for leasing in the last forest plan—and as a result of oil and gas lease sales the companies now have valid interests in developing the leases.

Each time a plan is revised the public has the opportunity to tell the Forest Service how we’d like our lands to be managed.

Making areas on the Shoshone unavailable for future oil and gas leasing is something the Wyoming Outdoor Council has identified as a priority.

If lands can be safeguarded in the plan, we won’t face controversial lease sales and unpopular drilling proposals in the future.

Here is the schedule for the upcoming Shoshone National Forest meetings (all times 6–8 p.m.):


  • Monday, February 28, Big Horn Federal, 1701 Stampede Avenue, Cody, Wyoming
  • Tuesday, March 1, Headwaters Art and Convention Center, 20 Stalnaker, Dubois, Wyoming
  • Wednesday, March 2, Monarch Hall at the Pronghorn Lodge, 150 East Main, Lander, Wyoming
  • Thursday, March 3, Big Horn Federal, 643 Broadway, Thermopolis, Wyoming

In its official announcement, the Forest Service said it plans to present information at these meetings about the revision process, the timeline for completing the revised plan, and how the agency studies the social and economic effects of its decisions.

According to the agency, new forest supervisor Joe Alexander, local district rangers, and members of the planning team will be available to answer questions.

The public is also welcome to attend and observe a meeting of the government cooperators from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., Thursday, March 3, at the Big Horn Federal meeting room in Thermopolis.

At the end of the meeting there will be time for the public to make statements and ask questions.

Forest plan revision information is available on the Shoshone National Forest’s website or at any Shoshone National Forest office in Cody, Dubois, and Lander.

Contact: Lisa McGee, national forests and parks program director, Wyoming Outdoor Council, lisa@wyomingoutdoorcouncil.org.

Field Notes


Energy efficiency bill would serve the public good

By Richard Garrett, Jr.
Your voice for conservation at the Wyoming State Legislature

I TESTIFIED YESTERDAY MORNING AND ASKED THE WYOMING SENATE CORPORATIONS COMMITTEE TO PASS HOUSE BILL 179, which would establish a statewide program for encouraging residential energy efficiency improvements that could help reduce costs for Wyoming consumers and reduce harmful pollution and waste.

The committee passed the bill on a 4-1 vote.

The full Senate will debate and vote on this proposed program next week. Since the bill has already passed the House, passage in the Senate would send it to Gov. Matt Mead for his signature.

This energy efficiency bill is important because it would allow electric power producers to conduct, at the request of consumers, residential no-cost energy audits.

The power company could then suggest improvements, finance those improvements, and then bill the costs to consumers on their monthly residential electric bills.

Click here to read the House energy efficiency bill.

The bill was introduced in the Wyoming State House by Reps. Keith Gingery and Ruth Ann Petroff, with the hopes of enabling this program to be implemented in Teton County where the availability of power is capped at 85 megawatts.

The power company has informed Teton County that without an energy efficiency program the residents of the county (its customers) might be subject to a tripling of their energy costs and/or rolling brown-outs in the coming years.

House Bill 179 makes good environmental sense and serves the public good. Here’s why:


  1. By establishing an energy efficiency program, one that can be adopted statewide, the House energy efficiency bill will be part of the solution to reducing the need for new coal-fired power plants. It can also reduce or cap loads on existing plants and help to avoid the installation of new and costly energy transmission corridors, which disrupt open space and wildlife habitats. Meanwhile it can be part of the effort to reduce the human health impacts of burning coal for energy. Power plant emissions are known to cause human health problems (a just-released study by the Harvard Medical School estimates human health costs in the Appalachian region of the United States alone to be $74.6 billion).
  2. Wyoming is obligated by the United States Environmental Protection Agency’s 1999 regional haze rule to create and implement a plan to manage industrial air pollutants that cause regional haze. Power plant emissions are significant contributors to regional haze. The state will inevitably have to grapple with this issue—one benefit of this House energy efficiency bill is that it can make the state’s implementation task easier.
  3. Yet another public benefit of House Bill 179 is that it may help to reduce the likelihood of brown-outs in an area that drives tourism, one of Wyoming’s primary economic engines. The Greater Yellowstone region attracts tourists from around the world. Last year Yellowstone National Park attracted a record number of visitors—drawing upwards of 3.6 million tourists. By implementing a plan for energy efficiency, the region expects to be able to provide consistent and uninterrupted services to residents and tourists while using no additional energy. Visitors will not be subjected to the effects of restricted energy availability and will continue to find the area to be an attractive place to spend their time. In 2009 the tourism industry contributed $2.5 billion to the state’s economy. Thus it is a crucial part of the region’s and the state’s economy and economic stability. An added benefit is that with cleaner air (reduced regional haze), residents and visitors will continue to enjoy the area’s unrivaled viewsheds.

Now that the House energy efficiency bill has passed in committee it will have to survive three votes in the full Senate. Assuming it does pass the Senate we will encourage the governor to sign it into law.

If you agree that this is an important issue, we urge you to be in touch with your senator and ask for his or her vote.

Click here for a list of Wyoming State senators, with their contact information.

If you have any questions about this or any other bill, please be in touch with the Wyoming Outdoor Council’s legislative advocate, Richard Garrett at richard@wyomingoutdoorcouncil.org; 307-438-9516.

Field Notes


Don’t Miss This WyoFile Feature: Picturing Yellowstone

See the entire feature here.

by Ruffin Prevost on February 15, 2011

CODY — More than 3.6 million people visited Yellowstone National Park last year, but there’s no telling how many millions of pictures they took while there. Photographing Old Faithful, Lower Yellowstone Falls and wildlife from bison to bears is a daily rite of passage for tourists by the busloads.

But for some enthusiasts lucky enough to live at the doorstep of America’s first national park, Yellowstone is an endless reservoir of inspiring natural images that serves as both a focus and a point of departure for a community of diverse photographers.

There’s no doubt that photographers are drawn to Yellowstone Country, but “this area creates photographers — it created me as a photographer,” said Meg Sommers a nature photographer and president of the Cody Camera Club.

A coyote mother cares for her nine pups. (photo ©Meg Sommers — click to enlarge)

Sommers and other members of Open Range Images, a cooperative fine art photo gallery, helped organize a show last week of work by more than 30 local photographers. Though the eclectic display included everything from the birds of Costa Rica to Death Valley scenery, it was mainly filled with images of wildlife and natural landscapes from around Yellowstone Country.

See the entire feature here.

Photo: A coyote mother cares for her nine pups. (photo ©Meg Sommers — click to enlarge)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Field Notes


Op-Ed: Big Energy Makes Misleading Economic Claims


Google Earth satellite image of the Pinedale Anticline natural gas field on public lands near Pinedale, Wyoming. (Click photo to enlarge)


Google Earth satellite image of the nearby Jonah natural gas field on public lands south of Pinedale, Wyoming. (Click photo to enlarge)


From the Op-Ed: “Big energy makes misleading economic claims”
Originally published in the Casper Star-Tribune
Sunday, February 13, 2011

By Bruce Pendery






OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENT ON PUBLIC LANDS IS alive and well despite what some special-interest groups are claiming.

Lobbyists for big energy hope to convince Congress to undo commonsense Interior Department drilling reforms, and they’re hoping to roll back important environmental and public safety protections by making unfounded claims about how these reforms affect the economy. Congress should not heed these complaints.

The fact is, with these reforms in place, the energy industry is poised to develop a massive number of oil and gas projects in the West.

?In Wyoming, for example, the Bureau of Land Management is working to approve the Continental Divide-Creston project, a field of about 9,000 new wells.

It will be one of the biggest drilling operations in the nation-roughly the size of the well-known and extremely productive Jonah and Pinedale Anticline projects combined.

The BLM is also in the midst of approving five other new projects in Wyoming that would authorize drilling nearly 11,000 more wells. This level of drilling constitutes another boom.

Since last July, the BLM has decided protests challenging 10 oil and gas lease sales in Wyoming, issuing about 80 percent of the parcels that had been protested.

There is no large backlog of undecided lease protests as some industry groups claim.

Still, the Western Energy Alliance, an oil and gas industry promoter, recently issued a report claiming the number of lease parcels on public lands has declined under the current administration. But this is just a selected piece of the story.

While the number and acreage of oil and gas leases have declined recently, oil and natural gas prices-and demand for these commodities-have also tumbled during this period, caught up in the Great Recession. Companies have been less interested in drilling or nominating parcels of land to be leased.

A downward trend in leasing activities has been a nationwide phenomenon, and not just on federal lands. It has been a result of market forces, not government practices and policies.

As the WEA’s own research shows, the oil and gas industry nominated fewer parcels for leasing in 2009 and 2010 than in previous years.

The industry didn’t want new leases; they weren’t being “withheld” as WEA implies. Moreover, the industry continues to hold vast acreages of previously issued leases that it has not bothered to develop. And it can’t keep up with the number of drilling permits being issued or it doesn’t want to.

In 2010 only 36 percent of the drilling permits issued were drilled by industry.

The WEA’s data also show that total revenue from taxes and royalties from oil and gas development in the Rockies is way up since 2003. Total revenues have been flat since 2006, but are still more than three times what they were in 2003.

Oil and gas development in six Rocky Mountain states is currently generating about $6.6 billion in revenues annually. According to the BLM, revenue generated from lease sales was up 57 percent in 2010 over the previous year. This source of income remains significant for states.

The Obama administration favors development of natural gas. Therefore, the House Natural Resources Committee should seek common ground on this and other energy issues. Rather than attacking, for example, a reasonable plan to require public disclosure of the constituents of fracking fluids (which contain toxic compounds), the House should focus on making sure that fracking, which has contributed to increased natural gas supplies, is done safely. And opportunities such as increased energy efficiency put money in consumers’ pockets; so we could all agree to work toward that.

The Department of Interior’s public lands energy policies have been needed and appreciated by the public. If the only policy pursued in the House is to destroy these initiatives that would be a mistake. For example, the Interior Department’s leasing reforms have shed more light on the practice of oil and gas leasing, which had been almost solely the province of industry. This has now changed, and that’s a good thing.

The administration’s policy of recognizing wilderness-quality lands as “wild lands” is also widely appreciated by backcountry hunters, among others.

We don’t have to choose between economic health and environmental conservation. With care and foresight we can have good jobs and healthy public lands.

Voters will not tolerate loss of control and loss of access to public lands in the name of misleading economic claims made by energy industry lobbyists. These lands belong to “we the people,” and that must be the bedrock of all public lands energy policies.

Contact: Bruce Pendery, program director, Wyoming Outdoor Council, bruce@wyomingoutdoorcouncil.org; 435-752-2111

Field Notes


Milford recognized by Institute for Conservation Leadership




A PREMIERE EXECUTIVE-TRAINING PROGRAM has recognized Wyoming Outdoor Council Director Laurie Milford, along with five other graduates, as an exceptional leader in the field of environmental conservation.

Milford was featured in the Institute for Conservation Leadership’s 20th anniversary publication. She was picked from among 20 years of graduates of the Institute’s executive director leadership program.

“In this special [report], we have chosen to chronicle our work through the voices of some of the most exemplary leaders with whom we have had the honor to share the journey,” Scott Schang, the ICL Board Chair, wrote in the introduction.

Building on more than 15 years of experience working in the nonprofit and education sectors, Milford completed the Institute’s executive director program in 2008. She has been the executive director of the Wyoming Outdoor Council for four years.

“The training I received continues to help me lead the Wyoming Outdoor Council and its twelve staff who are working to make Wyoming a better place for future generations,” Milford said. “It’s a great honor to be recognized by the ICL.”

Field Notes


Participate: New Management Plan for Western Red Desert

Photo: Killpecker Sand Dunes, Bureau of Land Management lands, Rock Springs region.


By Nathan Maxon

THE FEDERAL BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT HAS BEGUN the process of revising its plan for managing public lands in the Rock Springs area and western Red Desert.

The agency is currently asking for comments and input from the public to help it identify such things as special places and important wildlife areas, and to help it determine how best to manage the natural resources in the region.

The deadline to comment is April 4, 2011.

The land use plan that is being revised is known as a resource management plan, or RMP. Once complete, the revised plan will guide how the federal government manages public lands in the Rock Springs region and western Red Desert for the next 15 to 20 years.

The BLM calls the first step in the planning process “scoping,” where the agency asks the public to identify management issues of concern and how those issues might be resolved.

We are encouraging people to identify the places they value most for wildlife, recreation, hunting, and fishing; and the places and landscapes they believe are too important or special to be industrialized by energy development.

The new plan, when finalized, will guide the management of such things as livestock grazing, recreation and access to recreational opportunities, wildlife habitat, forests and sensitive plants, archeological and paleontological resources, viewsheds, historic trails, wilderness quality lands, weeds, land reclamation, mining, oil and gas development, the use of off-road vehicles, and the siting and availability of wind energy development.


WHY PARTICIPATE?

It is important for members of the public to submit scoping comments to help the BLM understand the issues that are important to local citizens, and help the agency come up with potential solutions to those issues.

It is critical that we weigh in during this first step in the plan revision process to ensure that our issues and solutions are considered throughout the RMP revision process.

Our ideas, local knowledge, values, and suggestions are highly valued by the BLM—so please take the time to help guide the future of our public lands.


HOW TO PARTICIPATE

  • You can send your comments to this email address:

RockSpringsRMP_WY@blm.gov

  • You can send comments to the Rock Springs BLM mailing address:

Vera-Lynn Harrison, RMP Project Manager, 280 Highway 191 North, Rock Springs, Wyoming 82901.

  • You can attend the BLM “scoping” meetings:

(ALL MEETINGS WILL BE HELD FROM 4—7 p.m.)

LanderFebruary 28Best Western, The Inn at Lander, 260 Grand View Drive Lander, Wyoming

Rock SpringsMarch 1White Mountain Library, 2935 Sweetwater Drive Rock Springs, Wyoming

LymanMarch 2Lyman Town Hall Courtroom, 100 East Sage Street Lyman, Wyoming

FarsonMarch 3Farson Branch Library, 30 Highway 28 E Farson, Wyoming



For more information:

  • See the map of the Rock Springs Field Office to see what BLM lands are managed under the Rock Springs RMP.
  • Contact Nathan Maxon at nathan@wyomingoutdoorcouncil.org; 307-332-7031 ext. 11 with any questions.