Montana
Related: About this forumLands Package Includes LWCF Funding, Blocks Gold Mine Near Yellowstone
In passing a sprawling omnibus public lands bill on Feb. 12, the U.S. Senate in a 92-8 vote reauthorized the Land and Water Conservation Fund in perpetuity and blocked a proposed gold mine on the outskirts of Yellowstone National Park.
The Senate vote sends the measure to the House.
It was the largest public lands bill in a decade, combining more than 100 separate bills into one, designating hundreds of miles of river as wild and scenic, creating thousands of miles of new trails and setting aside nearly 700,000 acres of land for new recreation and conservation.
For more than a half-century, perhaps no program has been more instrumental in protecting and conserving the nations public lands than the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF), which has funded more than 41,000 conservation and lands projects at the federal, state and local levels, furnishing protections on roughly 2.3 million acres of forests while enjoying bipartisan support from lawmakers.
Read more: https://flatheadbeacon.com/2019/02/16/lands-package-includes-lwcf-funding-blocks-gold-mine-near-yellowstone/
2naSalit
(94,637 posts)That mine would have screwed up a major water source for a lot of people and resources.
SWBTATTReg
(24,617 posts)wanted to go back again to Yellowstone in the early spring as I did with 3 other friends. We were fresh out of high school and getting ready to go to college and we all went on the trip of our lives...a wonderful trip (1975) while we were still young and more active than we all are now. Camped out the entire 3 weeks. Neat.
Only 1 campground opened at that time and every night, we went over to the lodge and played cards and pretty enjoyed ourselves. Of course we didn't have the money then to stay at the lodge (a immense log lodge structure, that one could look at and be amazed at for days literally. Then, when we would go back to our campsite, we would generally be one of the few out on the road, and would pass buffalo, etc. on the way back (so we had to drive carefully).
A national treasure.