sagebrush
Active member
Last year we had a fire in the Huachuca Mountains and when the monsoon came in, the resulting mudslides wiped out the water supply for the City of Tombstone. The water was piped from 25 springs over tewnty-four miles to the water tanks above town. This system was put in place in 1881 and has been in continuous use since then. Governor Brewer declared a state of emergency and allocated $50,000 to help the city with the repairs. They bought the pipe and started doing the work. That is until the USFS found out and force the city to stop. The springs are located in a wilderness area and the city cannot use wheeled vehicles and power tools in the repair. Even though the city's water system was grandfathered over the wilderness area, the Forest Service says the work is too great a risk to the Mexican spotted owl and the Chiricahua leopard frog. There is no wildlife left in the moonscape that resulted from the wildfire. The city is making do with two ground wells, but if there is a fire or a pump failure, the city will be dry. The city is suing the USFS to compell them to allow the repairs and the Forest Service has promised to appeal all the way to the Supreme Court if necessary.
This is a perfect example of how the federal government is completely out of touch with the citizenry. The health and welfare of a community of 1,400 full time residents and 400,000 annual visitors is at risk. Several times I've commented on how the feds have stopped the work on wildlife projects, water catchments and predator control in our state that goes unreported and unnoticed except by the struggling mule deer and bighorn sheep. If the feds are willing to sacrifice 1,400 people, just imagine how willing they are to sacrifice a few deer and sheep.
This is why I am opposed to adding any more wilderness in our state. There are currently two proposals that would add 2,400,000 acres to the wilderness already contained in AZ. We already have an area larger than the entire states of Rhode Island and Connecticut combined designated as wilderness in our state. I wonder how the people in those two states would feel if the feds told them they could no longer use their cars, ride their commuter trains and use power tools in their entire state?
This is a perfect example of how the federal government is completely out of touch with the citizenry. The health and welfare of a community of 1,400 full time residents and 400,000 annual visitors is at risk. Several times I've commented on how the feds have stopped the work on wildlife projects, water catchments and predator control in our state that goes unreported and unnoticed except by the struggling mule deer and bighorn sheep. If the feds are willing to sacrifice 1,400 people, just imagine how willing they are to sacrifice a few deer and sheep.
This is why I am opposed to adding any more wilderness in our state. There are currently two proposals that would add 2,400,000 acres to the wilderness already contained in AZ. We already have an area larger than the entire states of Rhode Island and Connecticut combined designated as wilderness in our state. I wonder how the people in those two states would feel if the feds told them they could no longer use their cars, ride their commuter trains and use power tools in their entire state?