Fights lie ahead, but Obama gave us a strong foundation of conservation victories -
Some sunshine in these cloudy days.
Wilderness Society @Wilderness 2m2 minutes ago
Fights lie ahead, but Obama gave us a strong foundation of conservation victories - @JWilliamsTWS http://bit.ly/2kOxtjA @highcountrynews
https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/2000/1*u32amdtXu-2y3yks5cMxMA.jpeg
President Barack Obama at the dedication of the César E. Chávez National Monument, Calif., in 2012. Image: The White House, Pete Souza.
Note: This piece by Wilderness Society President Jamie Williams was originally published in Writers on the Range, the opinion service of High Country News.
The American West should be grateful to President Barack Obama. His stewardship of land and waters has ranged from Puerto Rico to the farthest reaches of Alaska, but his conservation efforts in the Western United States stand out. He took up long-overdue energy reforms on the public lands that are owned by all Americans, and he connected the dots between energy development and the greenhouse gases produced by it that contribute to climate change.
Of course, much of the credit for Obamas success has to go to the work of local coalitions and advocates throughout the country. But the president proved himself to be a true champion who pushed many conservation measures over the finish line.
Just months into office, Obama signed the Omnibus Public Land Management Act of 2009, which designated more than 2 million acres of federal land as wilderness. Ecologically important land was protected in Californias Sierra Nevada and White Mountains, on Oregons Mount Hood and in the high desert, in Idahos Owyhee Canyonlands, in Colorados Rocky Mountain National Park and Indian Peaks Wilderness, and in New Mexicos canyon country.
Wilderness areas were expanded on Montanas Rocky Mountain Front, in the Boulder-White Clouds region of Idaho and Alpine Lakes in Washington. To the south, wilderness was protected in the Pine Grove Hills and Pine Forest Range of Nevada, the Hermosa Creek watershed near Durango, Colorado, and the Columbine Hondo in northern New Mexico....................