Senate Joint Resolution No.
3–Committee on
Natural Resources
SENATE Joint RESOLUTION—Urging Congress to take certain actions concerning wilderness areas and wilderness study areas.
Whereas, The provisions of 16 U.S.C. §§ 1131 et seq.,
commonly referred to as the Wilderness Act, establish the National
Wilderness Preservation System, which consists of areas of federal
public land that are designated by Congress as wilderness areas;
and
Whereas, Congress has designated approximately 2 million
acres of certain federal public lands in Nevada as wilderness areas;
and
Whereas, If an area of federal public land is designated as a
wilderness area, it must be managed in a manner that preserves the
wilderness character of the area and ensures that the area remains
unimpaired for future use and enjoyment as a wilderness area; and
Whereas, A reasonable amount of wilderness area in this state
provides for a diverse spectrum of recreational opportunities in
Nevada, promotes tourism and provides a place for Nevadans to
escape the pressures of urban growth; and
Whereas, In conjunction with the provisions of the Wilderness
Act, the Bureau of Land Management of the Department of the
Interior in the late 1970s conducted an initial inventory of
approximately 49 million acres of federal public lands in Nevada to
determine the suitability of such lands for designation as wilderness
areas or identification as wilderness study areas and, in 1980,
recommended that approximately 5.1 million acres of those lands
be identified as wilderness study areas; and
Whereas, Until a wilderness study area is designated by
Congress as a wilderness area or released for multiple use, the
wilderness study area must be managed in a manner that does not
impair its suitability for preservation as a wilderness area; and
Whereas, In 1991, the Bureau of Land Management
recommended that Congress designate as wilderness areas
approximately 1.9 million acres of the 5.1 million acres of
wilderness study areas in Nevada and release the remainder of the
wilderness study areas for multiple use; and
Whereas, Although Congress recently enacted the Clark
County Conservation of Public Land and Natural Resources Act of
2002, Public Law 107-282 (2002), which released approximately
224,000 acres in Clark County from its current status as wilderness
study areas, the recommendations made by the Bureau of Land
Management in 1991 have largely not been acted upon by
Congress, and the Bureau continues to manage approximately 3.86
million
acres of federal public lands in Nevada identified as wilderness
study areas; and
Whereas, It is important that decisions concerning whether to
designate wilderness study areas as wilderness areas or release
those areas for multiple use are made in a timely manner without
any unnecessary delays as the identification of federal public lands
as wilderness study areas is believed to impose significant
restrictions on the management and use of those lands; and
Whereas, It is also important to protect the ecological health
and existing and potential economic and recreational benefits of
wilderness areas and wilderness study areas in this state by using
reasonable and effective methods of fire suppression in those areas;
and
Whereas, Because approximately 2 million acres of federal
public land in Nevada have been designated as wilderness areas and
approximately 8.6 percent of the federal public land in Nevada that
is managed by the Bureau of Land Management has been identified
as wilderness study areas and because such designation or
identification is believed to impose significant restrictions
concerning the management and use of such land, including land
used for mining, ranching and recreation, the Legislative
Commission appointed a subcommittee in 2001 to conduct an
interim study of wilderness areas and wilderness study areas in this
state; and
Whereas, During the 2001-2002 legislative interim, the
subcommittee met several times throughout this state and facilitated
important and wide-ranging discussions among many agencies,
organizations and persons with diverse interests, perspectives and
expertise concerning wilderness areas and wilderness study areas;
and
Whereas, The subcommittee received a great deal of valuable
input from those agencies, organizations and persons, including
many valuable recommendations for Congress to consider in
addressing the issues concerning wilderness areas and wilderness
study areas in a responsible, reasonable and fair manner; now,
therefore, be it
Resolved by the Senate and Assembly of the State of
Nevada, Jointly, That the members of the Nevada Legislature
urge Congress to:
1. Support efforts to ensure that adequate access to wilderness
areas and wilderness study areas is afforded to the appropriate
agencies and persons so that those agencies and persons may
effectively combat fires in wilderness areas and wilderness study
areas;
2. Support the use of all reasonable and effective fire
suppression efforts in wilderness areas and wilderness study areas
without strictly confining such efforts only to the tools determined
by the federal agencies which manage federal public lands to be the
minimum tools necessary;
3. Accept the recommendation of the Bureau of Land
Management to designate 1.9 million acres of certain wilderness
study areas in Nevada as wilderness areas while also incorporating
in the designation process flexibility to consider relevant
information such as growth to ensure the establishment of
appropriate boundaries for those areas and recognizing that such
consideration may result in a reasonable adjustment of those
boundaries;
4. Oppose any efforts to conduct another inventory of the
federal public lands in Nevada for purposes of creating wilderness
areas or wilderness study areas without first releasing wilderness
study areas determined to be unsuitable for designation as
wilderness areas;
5. Ensure that more current information is considered before
acting on the recommendations of the Bureau of Land Management
concerning the designation of wilderness areas in Nevada as the
surveys of the Bureau were performed with limited time, resources
and technology; and
6. Avoid any unnecessary delays in releasing wilderness study
areas for multiple use by establishing a plan for addressing the
release of wilderness study areas in a timely manner that includes a
schedule or plan for the timely consideration of important issues
concerning wilderness study areas; and be it further
Resolved, That the Secretary of the Senate prepare and
transmit a copy of this resolution to the Vice President of the
United States as the presiding officer of the Senate, the Speaker of
the House of Representatives and each member of the Nevada
Congressional Delegation; and be it further
Resolved, That this resolution becomes effective upon
passage.
20~~~~~03