Renee Dana
Project Leader
BLM Rock Springs Field Office
280 Highway 191 North
Rock Springs, Wyoming 82901
Re: Jack Morrow Hills Supplemental Draft Plan
Dear Renee Dana:
I am writing to you today to voice my support for the Citizens' Wildlife and Wildlands Alternative for the Jack Morrow Hills supplemental draft plan.
The Jack Morrow Hills Area of the Red Desert is a national treasure and should be afforded the highest level of protection possible. Since 1898, when Wyoming hunter Dr. Frank Dunham proposed that the Red Desert be designated as a Winter Game Preserve, there have been numerous attempts by citizens to protect this unique area. Over the last century there have been unsuccessful proposals to designate the Jack Morrow Hills Area as a National Park, a National Monument, a National Natural Landscape, a North American Antelope Range and a Wild Horse Refuge. Allowing this opportunity to slip by would be a national tragedy.
The Red Desert is the largest unprotected and undeveloped high elevation desert left in the United States. Among other things the area boasts: the largest active sand dune system in North America; seven Wilderness Study Areas (WSAs); the largest migratory game herd in the lower 48 --approximately 50,000 pronghorn antelope; the largest desert elk herd in the world; some of the healthiest populations of sage grouse and raptors in Wyoming; numerous Native American holy sites; and Nationally significant historic sites such as the Oregon, California and Mormon Pioneer Trails and the former "Tri-Territory" meeting point of the Louisiana Territory, the Oregon Territory and the Mexican Republic.
I strongly urge that the Bureau of Land Management adopt the Citizens' Wildlife and Wildlands Alternative in the final Jack Morrow Hills plan. The Citizens' Wildlife and Wildlands Alternative would:
1. allow for responsible recreation, hunting, grazing and off-road vehicle use and access to public lands;
2. ask for the trade or buy-out of mineral leases in the area;
3. prohibit all new oil and gas leasing and large-scale mining activities;
4. prevent new roads and developments in roadless areas, increase the size of some Wilderness Study Areas (WSAs), establish new WSAs for lands identified as qualifying by citizens' inventories, and recommend that all deserving Wilderness Study Areas and wild lands be designated as wilderness by Congress;
5. protect Native American holy sites and historic landmarks such as the Oregon Trail; and
6. ensure the long-term survival of the Red Desert elk and pronghorn antelope herds and other wildlife.
I urge the BLM to select this balanced alternative as the best plan for protecting the natural beauty and ecological integrity of the Red Desert.
Sincerely,
The Undersigned