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OregonWild....they posted a listing of their targets.

O

Oregongirl

Well-known member
http://www.oregonwild.org/about/press-room/reports-and-fact-sheets/10-most-endangered-places-2009

10 Most Endangered Places 2009
Oregonians view themselves as some of the greenest citizens in the country. We ride bikes. We recycle. We get outside and play.

However, compared to our neighbors, we lag far behind in protecting our most pristine landscapes as Wilderness. With only 4% of the state protected (compared to 11% in Washington, 14% in California, and 8% in Idaho) our green credentials are thin when it comes to protecting our public land. A lack of Wilderness protection isn't the only thing threatening our state's wild places.

This summer, we toured the state and identified ten at-risk landscapes. Follow the links on this page to find out more about each threatened locale in our 10 Most Endangered Places report.

Support our work to protect Endangered Places!
While you're looking through the report, remember, for 35 years Oregon Wild has stood up to the challenges facing our last wild places. All along we've done it with the generous support of people like you. Please consider making a special "endangered places" donation to Oregon Wild today. Now is a great time to give to protect Oregon. For every dollar you donate before September 30, two major donors will match your gift with an additional dollar-and-a-half. Please contribute today.

10 Most Endangered Places List:
Crater Lake Wildlands
Tule Lake and Lower Klamath Lake National Wildlife Refuges
Oregon’s Yellowstone—Siskiyou Wild Rivers (submit a photo for our Photo Contest Endangered Places category)
Clackamas River Watershed
Wallowa Whitman National Forest
Steens Mountain
Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area
Tillamook and Clatsop State Forests
Lookout Mountain
Wild Rogue

What makes a place “endangered?”

The ten places represented in this report are by no means an exhaustive list of the threatened landscapes in Oregon. From a backyard stream in La Grande to the expanse of our ocean waters, Oregon’s wildlands face constant threats both great and small. Considering this, how then did we select the ten natural areas described in the following pages?

In weighing each endangered place, we considered three primary factors:

the immediacy and scale of the threat;
the ecological, cultural, recreational, and scientific importance of the area threatened; and
the opportunity for an actionable solution
 
Do they kn ow how much money the oregon dunes brings into town like florance? If those get closed down, many small towns around the dunes will become ghost towns.
 
Looking around the ( I am more gay than you are) tree molester website I had a bit of a laugh when I ran across a pic of there board of directors. About half of em look like they have never seen a hiking trail, just the inside of a donut box.:rolleyes:
 
"Since 1974, Oregon Wild (formerly ONRC) has worked to keep Oregon a special place to live, work and raise a family. "
As long as you have a trust fund and Gay hobbies :mad:
 
Do they know how much money the oregon dunes brings into town like florance? If those get closed down, many small towns around the dunes will become ghost towns.

There's really no other reason to visit those areas. Wonder if those nice folks know the greenies are trying to bankrupt their towns...:mad:
 
It's to bad we can't split the state.Eastern Or and western or.That would help alot !:beer;

Its sad it has come to that point. I would vote it in. Better chance on the hunting tags too. Sorry west siders..:rolleyes: The good ones can always come east!
 
i ride most of the places on that list i think they should think about what might happen if they do close all 10 places ......with all the state cutbacks they won't have the manpower to stop us from rideing ....just a thought....just because it said closed on the gate in the fall doesnt mean itwill say it when 6 feet of the white stuff covers it.........
 
Of course they are from Portland, they need to get out more often and really see these areas from others shoes.

But beware because they can and will get some of it turned into wilderness.

They managed to turn 20,000 acres of desert waste land east of Bend into wilderness and it doesn't even meet the requirements of the wilderness act, the area has roads!
 
http://www.oregonwild.org/about/press-room/reports-and-fact-sheets/10-most-endangered-places-2009

10 Most Endangered Places 2009
Oregonians view themselves as some of the greenest citizens in the country. We ride bikes. We recycle. We get outside and play.

However, compared to our neighbors, we lag far behind in protecting our most pristine landscapes as Wilderness. With only 4% of the state protected (compared to 11% in Washington, 14% in California, and 8% in Idaho) our green credentials are thin when it comes to protecting our public land. A lack of Wilderness protection isn't the only thing threatening our state's wild places.

This summer, we toured the state and identified ten at-risk landscapes. Follow the links on this page to find out more about each threatened locale in our 10 Most Endangered Places report.

Support our work to protect Endangered Places!
While you're looking through the report, remember, for 35 years Oregon Wild has stood up to the challenges facing our last wild places. All along we've done it with the generous support of people like you. Please consider making a special "endangered places" donation to Oregon Wild today. Now is a great time to give to protect Oregon. For every dollar you donate before September 30, two major donors will match your gift with an additional dollar-and-a-half. Please contribute today.

10 Most Endangered Places List:
Crater Lake Wildlands
Tule Lake and Lower Klamath Lake National Wildlife Refuges
Oregon’s Yellowstone—Siskiyou Wild Rivers (submit a photo for our Photo Contest Endangered Places category)
Clackamas River Watershed
Wallowa Whitman National Forest
Steens Mountain
Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area
Tillamook and Clatsop State Forests
Lookout Mountain
Wild Rogue

What makes a place “endangered?”

The ten places represented in this report are by no means an exhaustive list of the threatened landscapes in Oregon. From a backyard stream in La Grande to the expanse of our ocean waters, Oregon’s wildlands face constant threats both great and small. Considering this, how then did we select the ten natural areas described in the following pages?

In weighing each endangered place, we considered three primary factors:

the immediacy and scale of the threat;
the ecological, cultural, recreational, and scientific importance of the area threatened; and
the opportunity for an actionable solution

You can't log any of the top ten places that you mentioned anymore. They have basically been shut down and what hasn't, is highly restricted and monitored. So what is the threat? Motorized vehicles? Close all the roads and only hikers and horses are going to see it. Then after it catches on fire and burns up, they won't even want to see it. So what are we gaining by locking it up? How many more jobs do we need to loose in Oregon?
 
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