August 06, 2004
Norton OKs $493 million for Nevada
conservation
By Launce Rake
lrake@lasvegassun.com
LAS VEGAS SUN
Interior Secretary Gale Norton, a ranking member of the Bush
administration criticized by environmentalists for catering to business
interests, announced her approval Thursday of $493 million to be spent for
conservation-related purposes in Nevada.
Norton made the announcement at the Las Vegas Springs Preserve, which
will receive $27 million for continued environmental restoration work at the
historic site off Valley View Boulevard.
A group of about a dozen protesters from the Sierra Club and other
environmental groups carried signs outside the preserve attacking the
administration's policies.
Norton attended the signing ceremony for the $493 million with
Republican Chip Maxfield, chairman of the Clark County Commission; Rep. Shelley
Berkley, the Las Vegas Democrat; Bureau of Land Management State Director
Robert Abbey; and Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev.
Ensign, while still a congressman in 1998, helped draft and pass the
Southern Nevada Public Lands Management Act that calls for the sale of land in
Clark County with proceeds going to conservation and recreation purposes, the
Southern Nevada Water Authority, and the state's public schools.
"These funds will go for conservation, recreation, open-space
activities throughout Nevada," Norton said before signing over the money. Just
shy of 90 percent of the money will be spent in Clark County, she said.
As she has before, Norton said the land management act could serve as
a model for other areas, including other parts of Nevada, which are largely
owned and managed by the federal government.
"There are other areas where these kinds of projects might work,"
Norton said. "It's something that other communities are thinking about."
Maxfield, who also is chairman of the board running the Las Vegas
Springs Preserve, said Norton's visit to Southern Nevada is good news.
"Every time I've had the pleasure to be in the company of Secretary
Gale Norton something good has happened to Nevada," he said.
Maxfield pointed to the mix of wetlands and dusty raw earth in the
preserve. Money from the land sales will pay for desert gardens, an
amphitheater, children's play areas, education exhibits, regional trail
connections and other improvements to the preserve, he said.
"It is just beginning," he said. "You can see all the construction
that is going on."
Ensign agreed.
"I'm really glad she (Norton) is here today because she brought her
checkbook," he said.
The BLM auctions have provided much more income for various
conservation efforts than originally estimated, Norton and Ensign noted,
because of the skyrocketing value of vacant land in and around Las Vegas.
To date, the sales have generated more than $694 million. Of that, the
law sends 5 percent to the state's school trust fund and 10 percent to the
Southern Nevada Water Authority. The remaining 85 percent goes to the
conservation, recreation and environmental purposes.
The laundry list of projects to be funded throughout Clark County --
and one big one for Lake Tahoe -- includes $230 million for work on parks,
trails and natural areas, $47 million for purchases of environmentally
important land, $48 million for conservation initiatives and $88 million for
capital improvements to the region's recreation and conservation sites. Among
the projects funded by Norton's action Thursday are:
- $47 million for work to restore Lake Tahoe.
- $21.5 million for the construction of the Forest Service's
information center in the Spring Mountains National Recreation Area.
- $21.1 million for development of the Craig Ranch Regional Park in
North Las Vegas. * $20 million for the purchase of the Hacienda Hotel and
Casino in the Lake Mead National Recreation Area, by the National Park Service.
- $18.9 million for creation of an educational center at the Oliver
Ranch in the Spring Mountains-Red Rock National Conservation Area.
Some of the other Southern Nevada projects include: $15.8 million
for improvements to Clark County's Sunset Regional Park, $15.8 million for
construction of a regional shooting park to be administered by Clark County,
$3.7 million for an anti-littering and dumping program in the desert and $1.1
million for the purchase of inholdings at Calico Basin in the Red Rock Canyon
National Conservation Area.
Henderson projects receiving funds include $12.1 million for
Cornerstone Lake Community Park and $10.1 million while North Las Vegas gets
$9.8 million for a regional trail.
Lake Mead receives $9.5 million for work to mitigate the impacts
of the ongoing drought on boat ramps and marinas and $4.7 million for a public
safety communication center.
Another $15.7 million will purchase almost 24,000 acres of
sensitive river land in Northern Nevada's Washoe and Humboldt
counties.