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A supreme standoff

Utah environmentalists are suing the BLM for failing to protect wild lands form vehicles.

THE OUTDOORS DIGEST

April 06, 2004|Gary Polakovic, Times Staff Writer

Utah's deserts and red-rock canyons are an intoxicating dose of wilderness for urban refugees and tourists from the world over, many of whom arrive riding in or on off-road vehicles.

As debate over wilderness protection intensifies in the West, the U.S. Supreme Court has taken under consideration a lawsuit that will determine whether the Bureau of Land Management is doing enough to protect areas of Utah that may be worthy of official wilderness status.


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Environmentalists say that some of Utah's most pristine real estate is being etched with tire tracks. About 100,000 quad-runners, motorcycles and three-wheelers are registered in the state, not counting off-road vehicles coming from California and neighboring states. The suit argues that the agency has a legal obligation to protect these "wilderness study areas" from being degraded until Congress decides on the designation.

The case could bolster wilderness protection and clarify when federal agencies, in general, are liable for failing to follow an act of Congress. The court listened to oral arguments in the case last week, and a final decision is expected by July.

Brian Hawthorne of the Pocatello, Idaho-based BlueRibbon Coalition, which is made up largely of off-road vehicle makers, dealers and riders, said he's aware of environmental concerns. But he said off-road vehicles were allowed on some of the lands before they were identified as possible wilderness areas and that vehicle access should continue.

"We're not insensitive to the impacts of our use," Hawthorne said. "Motorized vehicles should be allowed in these areas on existing trails. They shouldn't be allowed to go willy-nilly. The point that gets lost is how much land has already been closed" to off-road vehicles.

But environmentalists say riders are colonizing land that Congress determined should be studied for possible inclusion as wilderness, a designation that carries protections so strict that the lands must be free of roads and all mechanized vehicles including bicycles, and managed to preserve their wild character. The BLM has yet to act on that mandate.

"The BLM has been studying these lands for 20 years. Their inaction is leading to impairment," said Larry Young, executive officer for the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, one of the groups that brought the suit in 1999. "It has to do with whether a land management agency can be held accountable for failure to manage lands."

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