Sign up for my
E-Newsletter
My Latest Report from Washington
Visiting Washington? Have Breakfast
With Dianne
Washington D.C.
Tours & Information
Flag Requests
Academy Nominations
Intern Applications
Scheduling
Casework
More California
Resources
Grants & Federal
Domestic Assistance
|
Press Enterprise
(Riverside, CA)
Desert's protective blanket turns 10
November 12, 2004
In the decade since the California Desert Protection Act was
signed into law - preserving 7.7 million acres and establishing
the Mojave National Preserve and creating the Joshua Tree and
Death Valley national parks, more than 24 million people have
visited this beautiful landscape.
I have no doubt that many of these visitors have been awed by
the desert's majesty and serenity. That was certainly the way I
felt upon first viewing the desert. It has been my reaction
every time I return.
According to the National Parks Conservation Association, this
dramatic increase in visitors has created more than 2,500 jobs
since the bill was signed into law, and over $ 95 million is
being pumped into the local economy each year.
This is a major reason why the Desert Protection Act now enjoys
broad support not just from hikers, campers and
environmentalists, but also community and business leaders, and
private property owners.
And the desert has become a mecca for millions of people around
the world who love its stark beauty and varied natural landscape.
Indeed, the desert offers some of the world's last remaining
dinosaur tracks, Indian petroglyphs, abundant spring
wildflowers, extinct volcanoes, wild burros, and threatened
species including the bighorn sheep and the desert tortoise - an
animal known to live for as many as 100 years.
Joshua Tree, encompassing parts of both the Mojave and Colorado
deserts, contains magnificent rock formations, forests
blanketing the high country, abundant yellow creosote bushes and
rugged Joshua trees. The Death Valley landscape, marked by a
diverse range of salt playas, alpine forests, and jagged rocks,
is a land of extremes - one of the hottest, driest, and lowest
places on Earth.
And the Mojave National Preserve, with its granite, limestone,
and metamorphic rocks, has remarkable geological diversity and
the largest Joshua Tree forest in the world.
I am especially pleased that the act is a living bill - one that
we keep adding to through a unique public-private partnership
has been formed to expand protected areas by acquiring private
holdings from willing sellers.
This effort has resulted in the sale of nearly 600,000 acres
from Catellus Development Corp. and other private sellers to the
Wildlands Conservancy, making this the largest conservation land
acquisition in United States history.
In total, this acquisition of private land protects:
* More than 100,000 acres of private land within Joshua Tree
National Park and the Mojave National Preserve.
* Almost 200,000 acres in 18 wilderness areas.
* More than 200,000 acres of habitat for bighorn sheep and
desert tortoises.
* Access to hundreds of miles of private dirt roads and
backcountry areas for hunting, hiking, camping and exploring.
There is no question that the effort to protect the desert will
continue to face challenges, especially over questions about
water rights and how the desert is used.
But I will remain vigilant in ensuring that intent of the Desert
Protection Act is preserved so that the desert can continue to
sustain the pioneers who choose to live on its frontiers and at
the same time be a place of enjoyment for the millions who visit
it each year. |
|