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- From: ndallen@r-node.gts.org (Nigel Allen)
- Subject: Conservationists Warn of Last-Minute Threat to Alaska Rivers, Lakes
- Message-ID: <1992Dec23.101007.12077@r-node.gts.org>
- Organization: Echo Beach, Toronto
- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1992 10:10:07 GMT
- Lines: 64
-
- Here is a press release from American Rivers.
-
- Conservationists Warn of Last-Minute Threat to Alaska Rivers, Lakes
- To: National Desk, Environment Writer
- Contact: Tom Cassidy or Randy Showstack, 202-547-6900,
- both of American Rivers
-
- WASHINGTON, Dec. 22 -- American Rivers and the
- Northern Alaska Environmental Center today urged U.S. Interior
- Secretary Manuel Lujan to avoid striking a major land deal with
- Alaska Gov. Walter Hickel in the waning days of the Bush
- administration.
- The state seeks ownership to the lands beneath over 200 rivers
- and lakes.
- "The final weeks before a new administration takes office is not
- the time to make precedent setting deals involving control over
- nationally significant natural resources," a joint letter from the
- conservation organizations states.
- "If the state is successful," the letter continues, "title to
- thousands of miles of riverbed throughout federal Conservation
- System Units will become ribbons of state-owned land.
- Unfortunately, these rivers will then become targets of
- state-licensed development, including riverbed mining, regardless
- of the incompatibility of such development with the surrounding
- federal protected areas."
- At risk are 12 National Wild and Scenic Rivers, 74 rivers and
- lakes in National Wildlife Refuges, 26 rivers and lakes in National
- Parks, plus numerous other water bodies within Conservation System
- Units.
- "The State of Alaska is attempting the latest step in one of the
- largest land grabs in history," said Thomas J. Cassidy, general
- counsel for American Rivers, the nation's leading
- river-conservation organization. "This attempt, if it succeeds,
- threatens to disrupt some of the nation's most significant
- ecological, fish, wildlife, and recreational values now protected
- within National Parks, National Wild and Scenic River corridors,
- and other protected lands, and to unravel the protective mandates
- of the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA).
- "The Interior Department must assert vigorously the national
- interest in preserving federal title to non-navigable rivers,"
- Cssidy added.
- Three key U.S. representatives, in a Dec. 11 letter, advised
- Secretary Lujan not to make a last-minute deal about these rivers.
- "[C]laims such as those asserted by the state of Alaska are a
- most serious matter, involving not only very important natural
- resources and values but also legal questions with potentially
- nationwide applicability," wrote Reps. George Miller (D-Calif.),
- chairman, House Committee, Interior and Insular Affairs; Gerry
- Studds (D-Mass.), chairman, Committee on Merchant Marine and
- Fisheries; and Bruce Vento (D-Minn.), chairman, Interior
- Committee's Subcommittee on National Parks and Public Lands.
- "Therefore, the state's ownership claims should be very carefully
- evaluated and should not be subject to precipitous resolution," the
- congressmen stated, adding that "any significant decisions
- concerning the state's claims be deferred for consideration by the
- new administration."
- While statehood grants to Alaska the ownership of beds of
- navigable waters, the state has asserted "overly broad and legally
- bankrupt" definitions of navigability, says Cassidy. "Given the
- Hickel administration's dismal conservation track record, each of
- these rivers would be at real risk from state-licensed mining and
- development."
- -30-
- --
-