JoseCuervo
New member
Responsible natural resource development works in many places around Montana. Responsible mining and drilling will be a part of Montana's future.
But there are some places that development simply isn't responsible. One of those rare, special places is the Rocky Mountain Front — 100 miles of breathtaking landscape where mountains collide with plains south of Glacier National Park. The Front has been described as an American Serengeti.
Here all of the wildlife Lewis and Clark observed on their trek of 1805-1806 still flourish, except for buffalo. It's one of the few places anywhere where grizzlies inhabit mountains and plains. Defenders of the Front have waged repeated battles over the years to conserve this beautiful public land. But each victory for local conservationists gives way to new development plans. The latest push comes from a small Canadian firm that proposes drilling three exploratory gas wells.
The Canadian proposal will require an expenditure of U.S. tax funds of more than $1 million for an environmental study. The Canadian drillers propose to haul 100 semi-truck loads of construction materials up a hillside. The proposed path is a steep trail that crosses private land. The project would require road improvement and eight miles of new pipeline.
The U.S. Geological Survey has estimated that all the economically recoverable natural gas under the entire Front would be enough to fuel this nation for six days.
This is a ridiculous amount of expense and incursion into public wildlands for a relatively small potential return to the public. It is up to concerned citizens to ensure that conservation is counted in the Front equation.
The Friends of the Rocky Mountain Front and many other members of the Coalition to Protect the Rocky Mountain Front are Montanans. Many of them make their living from the Front, as guides, outfitters, taxidermists and small-business people who cater to hunters, anglers and hikers.
They value the quality of life they lead at the edge of this remarkable land. The fact that regular Montana folks support the Front was demonstrated last month when four of them went to Washington, D.C., for what they expected would be a meeting with a staff member in Sen. Conrad Burns' office. When Burns saw Montanans in his office, he made time to talk to them. Soon afterward, Burns' office confirmed that the senator was open to the possibility of trading natural gas leases on the Front.
Sen. Max Baucus has proposed banning drilling in the Front, a plan that would be consistent with a Forest Service moratorium in place for several years.
Montana's U.S. senators should work together on a solution that preserves the Front for us, our children and our grandchildren. Montanans should speak up and let our senators know what we want.