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Rocky
Mountain Front, Montana
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The
Sun River Valley.
Photo by Cameron Naficy/NFN. |
about
the Front • What's
New • Take Action
• RMF in the Media • Maps
& Resources
What's
New
Blackleaf EIS Indefinitely Halted, 10/05/04
The Bureau of Land Management formally announced
that it has halted the environmental review process for Startech's
application for a drilling permit in the Blindhorse Outstanding
Natural Area of the Blackleaf portion of the Front! This is
great news that removes the immediate threat of drilling on
the Rocky Mountain Front and has cleared the way for a more
tangible discussion of a lease buy out and permanent protection
of the Front as wilderness. More information will be available
soon, so keep checking back to learn of new developments.
Coalition
to Protect the Rocky Mountain Front's Press Release (10/05/04)
BLM's Press Release
(10/05/04)
Missoulian
Editorial on BLM decision
Washington
Post article on BLM decision
AP
article on BLM decision
Field Tour
of Oil & Gas Development on Canada’s Rocky Mountain
Front
Sat. September 18th to Sun. September 19th
Visit the Canadian Rocky Mountain Front, just north of Waterton,
where oil and gas development dominates the landscape. We
will tour the area to see first hand what oil and gas development
looks like and talk with a local wildlife biologist about
its impacts to wildlife.
Spend
a Weekend on the Rocky Mountain Front!
September 3-5, Labor Day Weekend & the 40th Anniversary
of the Wilderness Act
Come join us for a weekend on the Rocky Mountain
Front. We'll be visiting the Blindhorse Outstanding Natural
area where Startech has proposed a well site, meeting with
many of the locals who are opposed to drilling, and taking
several nature walks. This is a must attend weekend for anyone
interested in exploring the Front, the proposed drill site,
local attitudes toward drilling, or the Front’s natural
history. For more information, click
here.
Hunters/Anglers support moratorium on all drilling
of the Rocky Mountain Front
45 state hunter and angler groups from around the nation sign
a resolution to place a moratorium on oil and gas drilling
on Montana's Rocky Mountain Front. Read the Resolution.
Take
Action
Write a Letter to the Editor asking that the Front
be protected as wilderness! Help keep up the pressure
on our congressional delegation and the BLM to protect the
Front. Click here
for a list of talking points on wilderness designation for
the Front, a template letter to the editor, and further information
on how to write a Letter to the Editor.
Comment
on the Blackleaf Drilling Proposal - Comments due June
1st!
Federal
Register Notice (4/15/04)
Supplementary
Information for Federal Register (4/15/04)
Press
Release from the Coalition to Protect the Rocky Mountain
Front (4/16/04)
Sample
Comment Letter to BLM for the Blackleaf Scoping period
Talking
Points for comments on the Blackleaf proposed drilling
Ongoing Protection Efforts
With the constant onslaught of threats to the Rocky Mountain
Front, its people, and wildlife from oil and gas development,
increasing motorized recreational use, and unpredictable shifts
in the political environment, we are seeking permanent protection
of the remaining unproteced areas of public land along the
Front. We want to preserve the Front's biodiversity and the
traditional ways of living, recreating, and enjoying the Front.
To do this, we are seeking legislative action to protect the
Rocky Mountain Front as a designated wilderness area under
the Wilderness Act of 1964. Wilderness designation is the
only way to save the Front from becoming an industrial drilling
site and motorized playpen for both its wildlife and the people
who have been living their for generations.
Fifty years ago, the Front was explored for oil and gas with
no success, then 20 years ago a wave of oil and gas interest
ran through the Front, again with little success in finding
active well sites. Each time oil and gas interests have attempted
to develop the Front, they have largely failed because only
miniscule
supplies of oil and gas exist underneath the Front, making
profit viable only when oil and gas prices peak, and also
due to strong local
and regional opposition from citizens, politicians, and
land managers. Now, with oil and gas prices temporarily high,
drilling proposals are springing up once again despite the
strongest outrage and opposition to drilling in Montana's
history. Even if we can keep companies like Startech out of
the Front for now, they can and will wait 10, 20, or 50 more
years before attempting to drill again just as they have in
the past. Without permanent protection for the Rocky Mountain
Front, we will one day lose the battle to protect it. If we
do not consciously decide, as a society, which areas we want
protected from oil and gas development, logging, mining, and
the takeover of our last roadless areas by motorized recreation
then unprotected areas will be drilled, motorized, logged,
roaded, mined and developed at the whim of the free market
and the everchanging political directives coming from DC.
The Rocky Mountain Front is a place that most Montanans,
and Americans, want protected from these ravages. Support
wilderness designation for the Front and join our coalition
to help protect the future of the Rocky Mountain Front.
What you can do
Our Congressional delegation needs to hear our message loud
and clear in order to help us protect the Front. Both Senator
Baucus and Burns are keenly aware of the Front's importance
and are investigating possible solutions to what they see
as the conflict. We need to help them craft those solutions.
You should copy any letter that you write to the BLM to each
of our senators and our representative or you can write a
letter to them directly. Share your concerns and vision for
the future of the Front with them.
Senator Max Baucus
511 Hart Senate Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20510-2602
(800) 332-6106
202-224-4700 fax max@baucus.senate.gov |
Senator Conrad Burns
187 Dirksen Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20510-2603
(800) 344-1513
202-228-2034 fax www.burns.senate.gov
(Note: this is his website. Click on "Contact Me"
to leave message) |
Representative Dennis Rehberg
516 Cannon Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
(202) 225-3211
202-225-5687 fax denny.rehberg@mail.house.gov |
In addition to participating in immediate
action alerts and contacting your delegation, you can
join
the Native Forest Network and the Coalition to Protect the
Rocky Mountain Front. We work hard to gather information on
current events related to the Front, post occasional policy
updates, lead walks on the Front, host Rocky Mountian Front
events in cities around Montana including presentations given
by a variety of individuals working with the Coalition to
Protect the Rocky Mountain Front, and help to keep the community
of ranchers, outfitters, conservationists, hunters, outdoor
recreators, and interested citizens connected in our discussion
and goals for Montana's wild and beautiful Rocky Mountain
Front.
Contact
Cameron Naficy, Native Forest Network
PO Box 8251
Missoula, MT 59807
(406) 542-7343
cameron@wildrockies.org |
Gene Sentz, Friends of the Rocky Mountain
Front
PO Box 763
Choteau, MT 59422
(406) 466-2750 friends@3rivers.net |
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