News
Service February 11, 2003
No More
Wilderness Areas,
Murkowski Asks
REVIEWS: Governor has reminded interior secretary of request from state
delegation.
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The Associated Press
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(Published: February 10, 2003)
Murkowski reminded Interior Secretary Gale Norton of the request, made last year by Alaska's congressional delegation, last month while he was in Washington, D.C.
"The governor is concerned about the idea that the Department of the Interior would create any more wilderness up here," Murkowski spokesman John Manly said. "Congress set aside all this wilderness, all these national parks and preserves, and we think that we ought to just stop there."
About 56 million acres, 15 percent of the state, is designated wilderness, said Cam Toohey, the interior secretary's special assistant for Alaska.
A policy instituted in 1981 by then-Secretary of the Interior James Watt, under President Reagan, said no further wilderness review was needed on lands administered by the Bureau of Land Management unless called for by Congress.
In 2001, just a couple of days before the end of the Clinton administration's term, then-Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt reversed the Watt directive.
Alaska's congressional delegation wrote to Norton last May asking for a reinstatement of the policy.
"There are dangerous traps set when reviewing areas for wilderness," the letter reads. "Once an area has been identified for wilderness study, the entire area is then managed as wilderness until Congress acts to release it."
In October, the delegation wrote another letter, this time asking the Interior Department to prohibit all new wilderness reviews, not just those on lands administered by the BLM. The new request includes lands under the authority of the National Wildlife Refuge System and the National Park System.
Toohey said the request is under review.
In the meantime, environmental groups have become involved because of proposals for a new land plan for the National Petroleum Reserve, and they want the government to consider wilderness designation an option.
"We think that the
governor is completely wrong to make this request," said Tim Bristol,
executive director of the Alaska Coalition. "We think that when the
Bureau of Land Management looks at tens of millions of acres of land that they
administer in Alaska, they should at least consider wilderness as part of
their evaluation process. To strip the agency of that authority sets a
terrible precedent."