Sportsmen keep eyes on energy companies
By DAVE BUCHANAN
The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Saying it shouldn’t take an act of Congress to protect valuable wildlife resources across the West from development, a coalition of sportsmen and conservation groups Wednesday announced the formation of Sportsmen for Responsible Energy Development.
Key to a campaign aimed at bringing balance between the demands of energy development and the preservation of wildlands and wildlife habitat is the Sportsmen’s Bill of Rights, a 10-point declaration that outlines the rights hunters and anglers can expect when pursuing their activities on public lands.
“Energy development is becoming more and more of a hot-button issue” across the West, said Shoren Brown, campaign manager for the new sportsmen’s advocacy group. “There’s a rising chorus of voices and a strong desire to see change in how energy development is being done.”
Heading the campaign are the conservation groups Trout Unlimited, National Wildlife Federation and the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership.
Chris Wood, chief operating officer for Trout Unlimited, said the “Forest Service and (Bureau of Land Management’s) usual order (of energy development) is lease first, ask about water and wildlife next.
“But it shouldn’t take an act of Congress to ... ensure a place like the Roan Plateau is protected from energy development,” Wood said.
Outfitter Gary Amerine, owner of Greys River Trophies of Daniel, Wyo., said energy development in the Bridger-Teton National Forest has reduced the mule deer herd by half in some areas.
Well-known television and radio personality Tony Dean of “Tony Dean’s Outdoors” said a recent flyover of Wyoming left him “shocked and appalled” at the amount of development impacting public lands.
Wood said the campaign “has become a position of last resort for us.”
Saying Trout Unlimited values long-standing partnerships with federal land-management agencies, he said he felt as though sportsmen weren’t being listened to when it comes to energy decisions.
Relying solely on legislation to slow development “demonstrates that something is fundamentally broken within the system,” Wood said. “It shouldn’t take a new piece of legislation to responsibly manage a landscape.”
More information about Sportsmen for Responsible Energy Development is available at www.sportsmen4responsibleenergy.org.
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E-mail Dave Buchanan at [email protected].
http://www.gjsentinel.com/news/content/news/stories/2008/04/16/041708_responsible_energy.html
Last modified: Wednesday, April 16, 2008 9:27 AM MDT
New group seeks to define balance
Seems like everywhere I go, people are dropping the big B-word.
Balance, balance, balance - I hear it all the time.
We need balance...
There's got to be balance...
Balancing habitat and wildlife with energy is ...
We're not against drilling, we just want balance...
It's all got to be balanced...
It's all the craze here in Wyoming. If you can say you want balance between energy development and wildlife, well you must be environmentally conscious, which if you haven't noticed is tooootally in style.
Even companies like Ultra Petroleum, Questar and Shell are saying it. They, of course, hire deep-voiced narrators to say it for them in low, soothing tones, but it's all the same: ultra trendy.
I, too, am totally, environmentally "in vogue" as I have found ways to work it into both academic and casual conversation.
Balance, balance, balance, balance, balance.
Sigh.
It's hard being this cool.
It's too bad none of us really knows what it means.
We all talk a big game, but none of us really know what balance looks like in practice.
Maybe it's time we figure that out...
This week, a group of conservation heavy hitters will unveil a group that might be able to answer that question.
The group, Sportsmen for Responsible Energy Development, is the brainchild of the same people who created Sportsmen for the Wyoming Range and includes pre-existing groups such as Trout Unlimited, Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership and the National Wildlife Federation.
It is a diverse bunch of entities, coming together to form one cohesive voice in the negotiation between energy needs and the protection of habitat and wildlife. Rather than go to Congress every time they want to preserve a small chunk of land, they decided to attack the problem at its core.
In short, they are trying to define balance.
From the looks of it, we're going to need it.
An analysis by The Wilderness Society estimated 126,000 new oil and gas wells across the west over the next 20 years. That's double the current total.
Wyoming leads that pack with 58,209, which in my mind is astounding. We whine and moan about the current pace of development, but unless the system is fixed, we can't even begin to fathom the impacts we might endure as a state.
Shoren Brown, campaign manager for Sportsmen for Responsible Energy Development, says sportsmen are going to have to create the roadmap.
"It's going to be up to the sportsmen to figure out a balanced approach and what that means and then advocate for it," he says.
The group will hold a symposium in Grand Teton National Park in May to gather the "best and brightest" minds in one place to let them duke out the issue. The hope is to come up with some sort of solution that will appease all sides - at least a little.
Brown says sportsmen are in a unique position to change policy.
And he's right.
Sportsmen carry two things that politicians value: votes and money.
A report by the Congressional Sportsmen Foundation estimated there were nearly 40 million sportsmen of voting age. Within that group, nearly 8 in 10 hunters have voted in every presidential election and 6 in 10 hunters have voted in non-presidential elections.
But it's not just votes. They control dollars, too.
The report found that hunters and anglers contribute about $76 billion to the economy, supporting about 1.6 million jobs.
With that kind of power, it's a wonder something like this hasn't come about sooner.
It's time for the cool kids to stop calling for balance and to try to decide what that actually means.
Shauna Stephenson is the outdoors editor at the Wyoming Tribune-Eagle. You can reach her at 702 W. Lincolnway, Cheyenne, WY 82001, by phone at (307) 633-3186 or at [email protected]
http://www.wyomingnews.com/articles/2008/04/16/outdoors/2_out_04-16-08.txt