The following info was just recently and/or will soon be sent out to our SAWS members.
I am often asked questions related to who supports or opposes our form of recreation. The questions asked and my answers given cover a wide range of issues, but one of the biggest threats to our form of recreation is additional wilderness designations. I have decided to compile some of the information to elaborate further on the wilderness issue in this article.
Our members should all be aware by now, that SAWS does not support ANY additional wilderness acreage be added to the existing 107.5 million acres of current wilderness in the United States.
Additional wilderness can be proposed in many ways; through Forest Service Plan Revisions that may include Recommended Wilderness Areas (currently a huge issue in Montana), through proposals by extreme green groups that get support from an elected member of Congress, or through a member of Congress proposing a new wilderness bill of their own. No matter which method of proposal has been used, a wilderness bill can not become law until the US House, the US Senate and the President of the United States all approve and sign off on the legislation. The legislation must first go through Congress before the bill can go to the President for his signature and finally become law. It should be noted however that the President can go around Congress and create a quasi-like wilderness designation through the use of Executive Orders. This is exactly what President Bill Clinton did with the Roadless Rule and numerous National Monuments. Not one of those designations went through Congress.
How does this process work you may ask? Whichever party controls the House gets to appoint all of the committee chairs, including the Chair of the committee that will determine which wilderness bills will be allowed to go forward for a full House vote (this process is basically the same in the Senate). If the controlling party (currently the Democrats control the House and Senate) want a bill to go forward for a full vote of the House or Senate, the Chair will allow the committee to vote on the bill. If the committee vote passes, the bill will then move out of the committee for a full vote of the House or Senate. On the other hand, if the Chair does not want a bill that may be proposed by the other party to go forward for a full vote of the House or Senate, the Chair will just kill the bill in the committee by not allowing a committee vote. If a bill does make it out of the committee and is passed by the House and Senate, the bill will then go to the President for his/her signature. If the President does not like the bill for various reasons, he/she can just veto the bill. The bill then goes back to Congress for possible changes the President might like to see, but if Congress can get 2/3 of the House and Senate to vote for the bill as previously written, then the President has no choice but to sign the bill and the bill will then becomes law.
As 501(c)(3) non-profit organization SAWS is forbidden from recommending and/or endorsing any candidates running for public office from any political party. SAWS is allowed to present facts and Congressional voting records to our members and the general public at large, which is exactly what I am doing below with a list of just a few of the wilderness bills and in the current 110th Congress with links to who supports them.
These bills range widely in the amount of new proposed wilderness acres, but the worst wilderness bill in this Congress is hands down H.R.1975. Most of you should recall our H.R.1975 SAWS Alert from last October. This bill is the grand daddy of all wilderness bills, and if enacted into law would designate over 21 million acres of wilderness in the states of Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, and Wyoming.
Dave
Snowmobile Alliance of Western States
Copyright © 2008 Snowmobile Alliance of Western States. All Rights Reserved.
Permission is granted to distribute this information in whole or in part, as long as Snowmobile Alliance of Western States (SAWS) is acknowledged as the source.
If you are not yet a member of SAWS and you would like receive these alerts, please sign up on our web site at: http://www.snowmobile-alliance.org. SAWS is FREE to join!
I am often asked questions related to who supports or opposes our form of recreation. The questions asked and my answers given cover a wide range of issues, but one of the biggest threats to our form of recreation is additional wilderness designations. I have decided to compile some of the information to elaborate further on the wilderness issue in this article.
Our members should all be aware by now, that SAWS does not support ANY additional wilderness acreage be added to the existing 107.5 million acres of current wilderness in the United States.
Additional wilderness can be proposed in many ways; through Forest Service Plan Revisions that may include Recommended Wilderness Areas (currently a huge issue in Montana), through proposals by extreme green groups that get support from an elected member of Congress, or through a member of Congress proposing a new wilderness bill of their own. No matter which method of proposal has been used, a wilderness bill can not become law until the US House, the US Senate and the President of the United States all approve and sign off on the legislation. The legislation must first go through Congress before the bill can go to the President for his signature and finally become law. It should be noted however that the President can go around Congress and create a quasi-like wilderness designation through the use of Executive Orders. This is exactly what President Bill Clinton did with the Roadless Rule and numerous National Monuments. Not one of those designations went through Congress.
How does this process work you may ask? Whichever party controls the House gets to appoint all of the committee chairs, including the Chair of the committee that will determine which wilderness bills will be allowed to go forward for a full House vote (this process is basically the same in the Senate). If the controlling party (currently the Democrats control the House and Senate) want a bill to go forward for a full vote of the House or Senate, the Chair will allow the committee to vote on the bill. If the committee vote passes, the bill will then move out of the committee for a full vote of the House or Senate. On the other hand, if the Chair does not want a bill that may be proposed by the other party to go forward for a full vote of the House or Senate, the Chair will just kill the bill in the committee by not allowing a committee vote. If a bill does make it out of the committee and is passed by the House and Senate, the bill will then go to the President for his/her signature. If the President does not like the bill for various reasons, he/she can just veto the bill. The bill then goes back to Congress for possible changes the President might like to see, but if Congress can get 2/3 of the House and Senate to vote for the bill as previously written, then the President has no choice but to sign the bill and the bill will then becomes law.
As 501(c)(3) non-profit organization SAWS is forbidden from recommending and/or endorsing any candidates running for public office from any political party. SAWS is allowed to present facts and Congressional voting records to our members and the general public at large, which is exactly what I am doing below with a list of just a few of the wilderness bills and in the current 110th Congress with links to who supports them.
These bills range widely in the amount of new proposed wilderness acres, but the worst wilderness bill in this Congress is hands down H.R.1975. Most of you should recall our H.R.1975 SAWS Alert from last October. This bill is the grand daddy of all wilderness bills, and if enacted into law would designate over 21 million acres of wilderness in the states of Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, and Wyoming.
Dave
Snowmobile Alliance of Western States
Copyright © 2008 Snowmobile Alliance of Western States. All Rights Reserved.
Permission is granted to distribute this information in whole or in part, as long as Snowmobile Alliance of Western States (SAWS) is acknowledged as the source.
If you are not yet a member of SAWS and you would like receive these alerts, please sign up on our web site at: http://www.snowmobile-alliance.org. SAWS is FREE to join!
Last edited: