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texasclimber
Jul 24, 2003, 2:34 PM
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If you have read the editorial in the new CLIMBING (September issue)t I am talking about. secretary of the Interior has opened areas such as Fisher Towers, Castleton Tower, and other areas northeast of Moab. I know that this is information many people already know about. The reason I am starting this thread is for help from the climbing community. Here are the emails of those involved. Please email or snail mail them. Access is an important issue for us climbers, lets come together and make a difference in how our landscape looks where we climb! Gale Norton, Secretary Department of the Interior 1849 C Street Washington, DC 20240 gale_norton@doi.gov Mike Leavitt, Governor State of Utah 210 State Capitol Salt Lake City, UT 84114 Kathleen Clarke, Director Bureau of Land Managment 1849 C Street Washington, DC 20240 kathleen_clarke@doi.gov Brent Gardner, Executive Director Utah Association of Countries 5397 South Vine Street Salt Lake City, UT 84107 bgardner@uacnet.org Chris Cannon, Chairman Western Caucus 118 Cannon House Office Buailding Washington, DC 20515 Ruland Gill, Chairman State Trust Lands Administration 675 East 500 South Salt Lake City, UT 84102 cannon.ut03@mail.house.gov Please mke a difference and email a few people to keep climbing possible in this region!
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killclimbz
Jul 24, 2003, 2:51 PM
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I am aware of some of the issues but I have yet to pick up the new climbing mag (if I even bother, I find both major mags highly boring these days). You should post what the issues exactly are so that we can taylor our e-mails to these people appropriately.
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texasclimber
Jul 24, 2003, 3:07 PM
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This is a seperate issue. I am refering to the state allowing oil and mining to develope and explore the area. This will entail tearing up land to find these natural resources. Please email them to show your opposition to such development. Here is what I wrote, feel free to use it or something like it. Hello, my name is __________ and I am contacting you in opposition of opening lands northeast of Moab, UT to oil and mining development. As an outdoorsman who likes to spend his vacation time in Utah, having such development in the area will force me to go somewhere else to spend my tourist dollars. Not only will this oil and mining development destroy the beautiful, natural scenery that Utah has to offer, but it will drive away revenue that the state will forever benefit from. Oil and mining might make a few bucks now, and destroy the landscape in the process, but will eventually be depleted. Tourism is sustained revenue that will continue to bring in money to Utah if you just leave the landscape alone, all while keeping Utah special and keep American citizens happy. Please don’t open these lands up for development, it is the only place of enjoyment that some of us voters have left.
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mother_sheep
Jul 24, 2003, 3:11 PM
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In reply to: This is a seperate issue. I am refering to the state allowing oil and mining to develope and explore the area. This will entail tearing up land to find these natural resources. Please email them to show your opposition to such development. Here is what I wrote, feel free to use it or something like it. Hello, my name is __________ and I am contacting you in opposition of opening lands northeast of Moab, UT to oil and mining development. As an outdoorsman who likes to spend his vacation time in Utah, having such development in the area will force me to go somewhere else to spend my tourist dollars. Not only will this oil and mining development destroy the beautiful, natural scenery that Utah has to offer, but it will drive away revenue that the state will forever benefit from. Oil and mining might make a few bucks now, and destroy the landscape in the process, but will eventually be depleted. Tourism is sustained revenue that will continue to bring in money to Utah if you just leave the landscape alone, all while keeping Utah special and keep American citizens happy. Please don’t open these lands up for development, it is the only place of enjoyment that some of us voters have left. Ahhhhh. Wasn't aware of that issue. Regardless, both are worthy.
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texasclimber
Jul 25, 2003, 2:59 PM
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BUMP...PLEASE WRIE AN EMAIL!
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rrrADAM
Jul 25, 2003, 3:38 PM
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Moved to "Access Issues & Closures" Forum. Also made it the Topic Of The Week to get it on the Front Page, to draw more attention to it. ~Adam
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texasclimber
Jul 25, 2003, 7:41 PM
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Thanks Adam for help and interest.
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alpiner
Jul 25, 2003, 8:17 PM
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In reply to: I am refering to the state allowing oil and mining to develope and explore the area. This will entail tearing up land to find these natural resources. Please email them to show your opposition to such development. Here is what I wrote, feel free to use it or something like it. Don't read the rags anymore either. Perhaps you could elaborate. NE of Moab sounds like the Yellowcat mining district, not exactly prime climbing. From what you say here, this has nothing to do with access for climbers. It's an environmental and ethical issue. Which is worse, temporarily tearing up our own land or killing a couple thousand people for energy?
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texasclimber
Jul 25, 2003, 8:34 PM
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The editorial article did not go into specifics, but it did say this.
In reply to: [Gale] Norton has opened many of Utha's best desert climbing areas for development amd set a precedent that bodes ill for Department of Interoir-managed wilderness throughout the country. That is the part I am concerned about.
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oudinardin
Jul 28, 2003, 5:47 AM
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BUMP!
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texasclimber
Jul 28, 2003, 6:59 PM
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Well, I am kinda pissed off for 2 reasons: 1) I got back "failure to deliver Notice" on nearly all emails I sent out to those f____in' politicians! So much for them caring what we have to say. Representative democracy my ass! 2) Second, I am kinda pissed that no one else has posted about this same notice, which tells me that no one has written anyone about this issue!!! I don't get it! We are climbers. We care about preserving this land more than anyone and just because it isn't your local crag doesn't mean that it doesn't effect you. Why not have as many places to climb as possible? Don't you take trips? Vacations? If we don't look after this issue, who is going to? Stop this greedy oil and mining development now before it si too late. I am going to try to find the alternative emails to these damn people. In the mean time, why not get a petition going and pin it up at your local climbing wall with a pen next to it! Help yourself and the rest of us climber!
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oudinardin
Jul 29, 2003, 4:17 AM
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Bump... This is Bullsh!t....man.
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moabbeth
Jul 29, 2003, 4:27 AM
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I've posted on this issue before texasclimber. It gets moved to access forum most of the time. The access issue at the base of Castleton Tower was a really serious one for me, that area is such a special place. I donated part of my tax return last year to the cause. And now it's been saved!! So one battle won, but still more to go. http://www.utahopenlands.org/ Good site for access issues in that area. As you can see by my name, it's a very important place to me.
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oudinardin
Jul 29, 2003, 4:31 AM
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Thanks beth. I agree.
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andy_lemon
Jul 29, 2003, 6:51 AM
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We donated money... Thanks to George Hurley for coming to Vertical eXcape Climbing Gym in Evansville Indiana and giving a slide show on "Early Desert Climbs". With the descent size crowd, a 5 dollar cover, and a huge gear raffel... we donated over $300 to the access fund that goes directly towards buying Castelton Tower. If you haven't seen George Hurley's slide show then please do. It is deffinately worth every minute.
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