Republican platform: Sell off public lands in the West, log national forests
A Republican president, Gerald Ford, urged on by GOP Gov. Dan Evans, signed into law legislation creating our wildly popular Alpine Lakes Wilderness Area, between Stevens and Snoqualmie Passes, exactly 40 years ago.
The drafters of the national 2016 Republican platform marked the anniversary by calling for a mass sell-off of federal lands in the West, and stepped-up logging in national forests.
Using the 1908 Antiquities Act, Roosevelt created national monuments in spots like the Grand Canyon and the Olympics where state and territorial governments were beholden to mining companies and timber barons.
The 2016 GOP platform would require that national monuments be approved by both Congress and state legislatures.
Roosevelt used his pen to create national forests across the West as a means to preserve public lands from corporate plunder. He expanded the national park system -- the idea that America gave the world.
The 2016 platform would turn public lands back to private interest. In its own words:
"Congress should reconsider whether parts of the federal government's enormous landholdings and control of water in the West could be better used for ranching, mining or forestry through private ownership.
"Timber is a renewable natural resource, which provides jobs to thousands of Americans. All efforts should be made to make federal lands managed by the U.S. Forest Service available for harvesting. The enduring truth is that people best protect what they own."
The people are already protecting public lands, witness public support when President Obama designated the San Juan Islands National Monument.
The Alpine Lakes Wilderness -- recently expanded with support from Republican Rep. Dave Reichert -- was created thanks to a public movement that overcame ferocious opposition from the timber industry, its public relations apparatus and its lawyers.
The Republican platform sure won't help the man atop Republicans' 2016 statewide ticket -- gubernatorial candidate Bill Bryant.
The former Seattle Port Commissioner is out with his first TV spot. It displays shots of public lands -- Mts. Rainier and Shuksan, a waterfall past which Bryant is hiking, a stream in which Bryant is fishing -- and touts Bryant as "a governor who is a conservationist."
Republicans have helped give us treasured places: Ronald Reagan signed the Washington and Oregon Wilderness bills, and legislation creating the Columbia Gorge National Scenic Area.
But very different Republicans are now in charge.
Dan Evans used money from the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund to preserve parks and recreation lands across Washington. He is cofounder, with ex-Democratic Gov. Mike Lowry, of the Washington Wildlife and Recreation Coalition.
Back in Washington, D.C., Wednesday, the GOP-run House took up a bill that slashes the LWCF by 30 percent.
Don't do this, "This really matters," said Rep. Derek Kilmer, D-Wash., opposing the cuts.
"We've seen hundreds of projects in our state as a result of this critical program," Kilmer added.
Do we want to go down a path flanked by clearcuts, gouged by mines, and decorated with "Keep Out!" signs by the new private owners of the people's domain.
By: Joel Connelly
Source: Seattle PI