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BLM weighing public input on management plan
Series of spring meetings scheduled
From Bend.com news sources
Wednesday, March 31, 2004
Is the management of over 400,000 acres of high desert lands, open
for public use and a wide variety of activities, an important value for those
who live in Central Oregon?
The Prineville Bureau of Land Management certainly thinks so, and is scheduling
a series of meetings to continue collaborating with community-based teams in the
development of a management plan for these lands.
The 400,000 acres of public land, dominated by juniper woodlands, shrubs,
grasslands and mixed conifer forests in the higher elevations, include very
special places such as the Badlands and Steelhead Falls Wilderness Study Areas.
The area is particularly popular with winter and spring season recreationists,
who enjoy activities such as hiking and geo-caching, recreational shooting,
riding off-highway vehicles, mountain bikes or horses.
It is also an important area for maintaining ecosystem health and diversity
including the management of wildlife, fire and fuels, water quality and
quantity; special management areas such as caves, wilderness study areas and
wild and scenic rivers; land uses such as livestock grazing, minerals, forest
products and military use; as well as transportation and utility rights of way,
land ownership, public health and safety and archaeological resources.
In a quickly growing region, these high desert public lands are “feeling the
pressure” of the increasing demands associated with a booming population. Given
these pressures, the importance of a strategic land use plan is vital to ensure
the long-term health of the land.
Over the past two years, the Prineville BLM has been working with a
community-based Issue Team to identify issues and draft alternatives in the
development of the Upper Deschutes Resource Management Plan (UDRMP) and
Environmental Impact Statement.
In April and May, members of the team will participate in a series of
meetings to consider the public comments received about the Draft UDRMP and to
create proposals to modify the Draft Preferred Alternative. The outcomes will be
incorporated into a Proposed Management Plan and Final Environmental Impact
Statement scheduled for publication in the fall.
The meetings are open to the public and will include a brief opportunity for
public comment. For the meeting schedule, visit our BLM website at
http://www.or.blm.gov/Prineville/Deschutes_RMP/Home.htm . For more information,
please contact the Prineville BLM office at 416-6700.
Read more . . .
The
Badlands Wilderness
BLM's UDRMP puts Bend's
Badlands off limits to Geocaching
Deschutes County
Commissioners hearing on Badlands Wilderness support
OHV use restricted in Upper Deschutes
Resource Management Plan
Winter
hiking in The Badlands WSA just east of Bend
Tread Lightly OHV USFS
tip of the month
OHVs to be held to
designated trails by USDA Forest Service!
New pole shows Badlands
Wilderness favored by voters
BLM posts Reward for information on
Juniper rustlers
BLM weighing public input on management plan
Oregon's Badlands hit by old growth Juniper rustlers
Photos
Congressman Greg Walden to visit The Badlands
Badlands Wilderness endorsed by COTA
OpEd
- Unregulated OHV use is being reviewed across the western states
OHV use curtailed by new USFS policy decisions
Sierra Club's Juniper Group
supports Badlands Wilderness
OHV regulation discussed at BLM meeting in Bend, Oregon
OpEd - Badlands part of
BLM's recreation management area
OpEd - We need the Badlands Wilderness
OpEd - Off-roaders have no reason to fear Badlands Wilderness designation
Speak for the Badlands at Town Hall Meeting
Hiking poles are becoming essential gear
Vandals destroy ancient
pictographs in the Badlands
Senator
Wyden tests support of Badlands Wilderness
Badlands Wilderness endorsed by Bend City
Commissioners
The Badlands:
proposed for Wilderness status
The Badlands unique geologic forms
explained by Chitwood pdf
The
Badlands, a brief history
The Badlands
pictographs
reported 75 year ago