katqanna
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Public lands for how long? by Don Thomas
Hunting, fishing and wildlife are important to Montanans. These are the reasons many of us live here, and tourism and outdoor recreation are now the state’s largest economic driver. Support for these values helped make Steve Bullock a blue governor in a red state, and politicians took notice. No matter what their ultimate intentions, U.S. Rep. Greg Gianforte and Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke both took pains to portray themselves as allies of Montana sportsmen. So did U.S. Sen. Steve Daines.
Their performance in Washington, D.C., has proven otherwise. Now Daines has introduced the ominously titled Protect Public Use of Public Lands Act. Why “ominously”? Because Washington politicians have developed a double-speak that allows them to sugarcoat legislation in ways that imply the opposite of its intention. This bill won’t protect anything...
It is always instructive to note who has signed on in support of bills like this. What about the endorsement from Big Game Forever (BGF)? Since numerous studies show that undisturbed security habitat is crucial for elk — our most popular big game animal — this group’s name sounds suspiciously like another example of double-speak, and it is.
BGF is an offshoot of the Utah-based Sportsmen for Fish and Wildlife (SFW), founded by Don Peay, a privatization advocate who once said, “It’s time to revisit the widely accepted principle… that game is a public resource.” These two groups cut a deal in Utah that allowed them to profit directly from the auction of big-game tags there. They also secured large sums from the state to control wolves even though there were no wolves in Utah. The Salt Lake City Tribune has reported extensively on their inability to account for that money...