There are exactly 17 days left to comment on
the
This ALERT is from the Blue Ribbon Coalition since this is in UTAH.
They need out support if you want to still see MOAB open!
The clock is ticking. There
will be no comment extension on this one.
This Action Alert is designed
to help you formulate your comment letter on this important plan. We are asking
our members who have enjoyed the spectacular trails in
There will be no "click and
send" action alert from BRC on this one. That's because the BLM has "rigged" the
process and the Alternatives so that a comment that says something like "I vote
for Alternative D" will not work.
But we've taken a lot of time
to look hard at what the Moab BLM is proposing so you don't have to wade through
thousands of pages to figure out what they are proposing and how to comment.
In order to help you write
your comment, we've taken all the important parts of the DEIS and compiled them
in summaries available via hyperlinks below. There are several key issues that
folks need to be aware of and comment on, so we also have formulated some
specific comment suggestions on the most important issues (see below).
If you find yourself lacking
motivation here, just take a second to look at the effort those anti-recreation
zealots over at SUWA have put into this
Hey, that's what you get when
you have 2 million
samoleans-per-anum to work with!!
Trust us on this:
this effort by SUWA is a serious problem for you, if you use a vehicle for
recreation in
Please read this Alert, click
the links and check out the maps and other materials. Bookmark the important
sites, as updates will be added right up to the comment deadline. Forward this
Alert to your friends, family, club land-use officers and your ridding buddies.
We put a lot of effort into
making the Moab BLM's plans easy to understand. Once you click the links and
check out our comment suggestions, you'll know what to do. It won't be
difficult.
But if you have any questions,
concerns, or just need some help writing a comment letter
-- please call.
Brian Hawthorne
208-237-1008 ext 102
Ric Foster
208-237-1008 ext 107
SITUATION:
The Draft Resource Management
Plan (DRMP) and Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) for the Utah Bureau
of Land Management (BLM) Moab Field Office has been released for public review
and comment.
In addition to a new RMP, Moab
BLM will be formulating a Travel Plan for motorized vehicles and mountain bikes.
Travel will be limited to designated roads, trails and areas.
The BLM has set a deadline of
November 30, 2007, for receiving information and comments pertaining to the
Alternatives and the analysis presented in the DEIS. Feedback regarding the four
proposed alternatives will be used to formulate a Proposed Resource Management
Plan, and ultimately, a Final Resource Management Plan and Travel Plan.
Comments and other information
may be submitted electronically at:
UT_Moab_Comments@blm.gov.
Comments and other information
may also be submitted by mail to:
Moab Field Office RMP Comments
Bureau of Land Management
Moab Field Office
82 East Dogwood
INFORMATION ON THE WEB:
BLM
information and documents:
The
BlueRibbon
Coalition Resources:
http://www.sharetrails.org/alertlist/subscribeform.cfm
http://www.sharetrails.org/public_lands/
http://www.sharetrails.org/public_lands/?section=MoabUpdate
What the anti-access groups
are doing:
http://www.suwa.org/site/PageServer?pagename=work_moabrmp
WHAT YOU NEED TO DO:
For maximum effectiveness:
1) Using the information provided from BLM and BRC's websites, as well as the
info and the comment suggestions below, write a comment letter addressing Issues
and Alternatives presented in the DEIS.
2) Copy your letter to your
political representatives. Snail mail works best. Pen a quick personal note to
your politico's staff and make sure they know you are PRO access, that you visit
the area and that you oppose both the rhetoric and the proposals of the
so-called "environmental groups." Find the address of your politico's here:
Rapid Response
Center (just enter your zip code)
3) 'CC' your comments to BRC
CC your comments to BRC at
brlandsinfo@sharetrails.org.
In the Subject line please put Moab RMP Comments.
Extra Credit:
Comments will be most helpful if you can state very specifically what you like
and what you don't like about each of the Alternatives. Suggest changes. Also,
it is good if you can reference a section or page number.
IMPORTANT NOTE:
Yes, this IS worth the time
and effort to write a good comment letter. Public comment is extremely important
and will help to move the Final Plan toward something that's good for the
recreating public. Individual comments like yours will also serve as a
foundation for groups like BRC to challenge any arbitrary or unfair closures, as
well as defend the inevitable attack from SUWA's lawyers.
If at all possible, your
letter should address these issues (please see comment suggestions below):
COMMENT SUGGESTIONS:
Comments may be submitted
electronically to:
UT_Moab_Comments@blm.gov.
Comments may also be submitted by mail to:
Moab Field Office RMP Comments
Bureau of Land Management, Moab Field Office
82 East Dogwood
Note:
A good comment letter starts with a brief paragraph about yourself and a bit,
about what you like to do when you visit the
____________________________________________________________________________
Issue: Comments about specific
roads, trails and areas to be designated for motorized and mountain bike use.
Comment Suggestions:
BRC has several detailed maps
for download that, for us anyway, are a lot easier to read.
Click here, download
the maps and talk amongst your friends, family and riding buddies.
NOTE:
Any specific comment on any road or trail, whether proposed as open or closed,
is useful and we believe taking the time and effort to do so will be very
worthwhile.
____________________________________________________________________________
Issue: There is not a true
range of management options in the Alternatives
Simply stated, there just
isn't much difference between the "Action Alternatives." And, both Alt. B and
Alt. D are completely unworkable as written, which naturally makes BLM's
Preferred Alternative the only "reasonable choice." The motorheads in the BRC
Public Lands Department will forgive you if you think the BLM did that on
purpose.
Finally, there are actually a
bunch of alternatives here that the public should be commenting on. There are
the three action alternatives for the RMP, then there are three action
Alternatives for the Travel Plan, and there are an additional two alternatives
for motorcycle (and ATV) trails.
Sheesh, BLM... how is the
general public supposed to be able to figure all this out, especially when you
give only a cursory discussion of the difference between the RMP and the Travel
Plan in your own document?
Comment Suggestions:
____________________________________________________________________________
Issue:
Months ago, when we blasted
our Moab Update information to our members and supporters, we made fun of the
BLM's management proposal for the White Wash Sand Dunes.
Months ago, when we blasted our Moab Update information to our members and
supporters, we made fun of the BLM's management proposal for the White Wash Sand
Dunes.
BLM's draft plan bans nearly
all camping until (if) they get around to constructing a developed campground
and would also implement a "fee system using individual Special Recreation
Permits." The Draft Plan also requires fencing around all of the
After meeting with the
planning team and learning they are absolutely serious about that, I guess we
aren't laughing anymore.
Comment Suggestions:
____________________________________________________________________________
Issue: Is BLM propsing a
"close first - mitigate last" approach to OHV use?
In BLM's #1 Issue they ask: *Where should adaptive management practices
be applied in response to unacceptable resource impacts?
Given the popularity of Moab
for recreation, and the fact that large areas are proposed to be off limits to
most recreational users, considering NOT applying adaptive management practices
to mitigate impacts is, well, not logical.
Comment Suggestions:
____________________________________________________________________________
Issue: BLM states the 'user
conflict' issue as a question:
How
should recreational uses be managed to limit conflicts among recreational users?
(Read
BRC's favorite statement on conflict by Art Seaman)
Contrasting the SRMA and Focus
Areas with the Travel Plan indicates that Moab BLM's preferred answer is to
create "exclusive use zones."
Providing opportunity for a
non-motorized recreation experience is great, but by imposing a near categorical
exclusion of other uses it removes the ability to designate key motorized uses
that are needed in a well managed road and trail system.
Comment Suggestions:
____________________________________________________________________________
Issue:
Because vehicles are not
permitted to travel off designated routes - for any reason - the Moab BLM is
proposing a "vehicle camping only in designated campsites" in the entire Field
Office. Such a restrictive policy would be appropriate for National Parks or
National Monuments, but for Public Lands this is truly unheard of.
Moab BLM staff argues that the
impacts from dispersed camping warrant such restrictions, and claim that their
Travel Plan kept open the route to nearly every existing vehicle campsite. They
say that most every campsite that did not have a "resource problem" remained
open.
Our review
says different, and we believe hundreds of campsites currently being used could
be closed.
Comment Suggestions:
____________________________________________________________________________
Issue: Special Recreation
Management Areas
There are some "Action Alert"
type comments below, but if you have the time we think it would be well worth
the effort to review the BLM's proposal and give them your input.
Frankly, a lot of what they
propose makes a creepy sort of sense. But there are "poison pills" that
(unnecessarily) make future management uncertain. In other words, if BLM doesn't
write this plan right, SUWA will be litigating them (and us) to death.
Check our info
as well as BLM's proposals. Quick links and page numbers are provided to make it
easy.
Comment Suggestions:
____________________________________________________________________________
Issue: Although many popular
ATV routes are classified as roads in Moab BLM's Travel Plan, some ATV trails
are not proposed as open and some of the Motorcycle routes should be designated
as ATV/Motorcycle trails as well.
Staff at the
Comment Suggestions:
____________________________________________________________________________
Issue: In the Moab Field
Office, true mountain bike single track trails are in short supply.
Comment Suggestions:
____________________________________________________________________________
Issue: Though 'stay on the
trail' is a critical policy for most places, recreationists need a few distinct
areas for open-riding.
In 1.8 million acres,
Comment Suggestions:
____________________________________________________________________________
Issue: Some important
motorcycle trails are missing from all alternatives.
The preferred alternative
includes about 100 miles of true motorized single-track. Alternative D adds
another 100 miles. But in total, the final plan should spare roughly 300 miles
of non-road motorcycle routes from being closed.
Comment Suggestions:
____________________________________________________________________________
Issue: In an incredible show
of chutzpah, the Moab BLM has included the White Wash Sand Dunes as a proposed
Area of Critical Environmental Concern (ACEC) in Alternative B.
Alternative B seems to be the;
"give
SUWA whatever they want, despite the existing, traditional uses that have
existed for decades" alternative. Sheesh, I wish we
got the same treatment in Alternative D!!
Comment Suggestions:
____________________________________________________________________________
Issue: Comments regarding
"Lands with Wilderness Character"
Decisions on this issue are
being made at the highest levels. OHV users must begin now to pressure their
elected representatives on this issue or many hundreds of miles of roads and
trails will be closed throughout the West. (You can find the contact info for
your political representatives on BRC's
Comment Suggestions: