Thursday, December 8, 2016

How the Battle goes in West Virginia

Randy and Kirsten Sharp have been fighting against a Nat'l Monument Designation in West Virginia for nearly 2 years now.  This was their latest e-mail:  
According to our senators they are opposed to it  as a few weeks ago. I have tried Rep Jenkins' office twice but have yet to hear from him. A little worried about him as some river people in another area has been pushing him on this. Whatever happens we need to look at the long term and try to get the Antiquities Act revoked or at least voted on by congress. Keep  me informed as to what is going on and wish you luck.     Randy

Published in October, 2016 -- The Push is on in W. Virginia as well
What will be President Obama’s legacy? The Affordable Care Act? The death of Osama bin Laden? Or perhaps his public lands legacy. President Obama has designated or expanded 27 national monuments and protected more than 550 million acres of public lands and waters, more than any other president.
Unfortunately, only 23 of more than 120 current national monuments are in the East. West Virginia currently has none. However, a group of Mountain State conservation advocates, businesspeople, outdoor recreation enthusiasts and other citizens has organized to secure a federal designation for the proposed Birthplace of Rivers National Monument.
“There are no landscape-scale national monuments in the East,” says David Lillard, special projects manager with the West Virginia Rivers Coalition. “There’s a need and a worthiness in the East as well.”Why create a national monument?

 First, says Lillard, a national monument designation, unlike a national forest, would permanently protect the land from industrial development, a significant step in this fossil fuel-rich state.Second, this measure would help ensure the purity of the rivers, a critical step given that millions of people downstream depend on them every day for fresh, clean drinking water. Just two and a half years ago, a massive chemical spill into the Elk River polluted more than 300,000 people’s tap water, which highlighted the vital need to protect this resource. Clean headwaters also facilitate positive recreation experiences downstream for fishing and paddling. More than 90 percent of West Virginia’s native trout streams fall within the proposed monument’s borders. And creek boaters flock to the headwaters of these rivers.

Finally, the designation of the monument would significantly boost tourism revenue throughout the area. According to an economic impact study commissioned by the West Virginia Wilderness Coalition, the monument’s designation would create 143 jobs, increase visitor-related spending in communities surrounding the monument by 42 percent, and generate more than $14.5 million in economic output annually. Similarly, land-management research group Headwaters Economics studied the local economies of communities bordering or adjacent to 17 national monuments in the western United States from 1982 to 2011, and they found that jobs grew at four times the rate of similar communities that didn’t have a national monument as a neighbor.Third, says Lillard, a monument designation would help guarantee that any future logging remains at a sustainable level.  
Later in the article it says: "Around the beginning of this year, the focus of this campaign shifted strongly toward the president,” Lillard explains. “He has indicated there will be more monuments designated. We’ve been meeting with his administration’s monument people for a long time, and they’re very interested.”
A presidential precedent of sorts exists for departing commanders-in-chief to establish 11th-hour public lands on their way out the door. For example, during the first seven years of President Clinton’s two terms in office, he designated one national monument. In his last year, he established 19, with seven of those only becoming official in his last week and a half in the White House.
- Read more at: http://appvoices.org/2016/10/07/monumental-momentum/#sthash.WcCn225C.dpuf



This second article was published 2 years ago when the environmental push began there: 
Read more:

Notice the strategies, and focus are nearly the same: create a coalition, bring in recreation and tourists, kill industry, and all will be well.

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