To: Senator Diane Feinstein (Chris Carrillo – Field Rep.)
Congressman Jerry Lewis
Supervisor Brad Mitzelfelt (David Zook – Chief of Staff)
Marisa
Calderon -
Gerry Hillier – S. B. County Public Lands Consultant
From: Chuck Bell, Pres.
760 964 3118 chuckb@sisp.net
Date: 2/7/10
RE: 2010 CALIF. DESERT PROTECTION ACT
Senator Feinstein’s and CWC’s
staff briefed a few of us in Lucerne Valley re: the Act – rather short notice
but appreciated – did a fine job – but after it was made public – AFTER working
with recreation groups, etc. in its formulation – not with us or other affected
communities – disappointing to say the least.
1.
The fate of the
Lucerne
Valley/Johnson Valley/Landers, etc. are the communities most affected by the
chopping up of the JV OHV Area. We strongly request that Senator
Feinstein and Congressman Lewis preserve all of it or as much as possible if
they want us to support the bill.
Assuming
"it's a done deal" - even though Congress eventually makes the
decision - which would likely go with DOD’s recommendation - the issue remains
what the Marines consume in the JV OHV Area is "DOD-managed" or
"BLM-managed". We advocate that BLM maintain its
jurisdiction - issuing DOD the rights of way for its use - not fully
under military jurisdiction - thus giving BLM and the public some element of
control.
At
least the portion of the JV OHV Area that remains intact gets
"enshrined". Problem is - the expansion will force a much more
concentrated ORV use to the west side (our side) - pounding the hell of what's
left out there - spilling over Camprock Rd. into the Ord Mt. Desert
Wildlife Mgt. Area. It looks like the Alt. 6 map shows the portion north
of
2.
There is no valid reason to include the
3.
Allowing hunting, rockhounding, travel on open routes, etc. to remain in
the "Monument" will produce more support. Although
existing mining and claims will remain - new claims/mining are not allowed –
which we adamantly oppose. Locking
up mineral production in the
4. '”Monuments"
in the
5.
The bill will force solar/wind
projects more into the w. Mojave (where they really belong is on
rooftops and parking lots) - but arguably with locations closer to the
grid with more infrastructure, etc. It
will likely divert more of these so-called "renewables" (consuming
tremendous acreage for relatively few megawatts) onto private land - but better
than on virgin public lands subsidized by the taxpayer and public land users -
but nevertheless a major impact on w.
6.
We support the concept of a single BLM
office responsible for processing applications for 'renewables' – one of the
Act’s better ideas - better coordination – a single point for public
contact. The bill seems to incorporate (conceptually) the "renewable
study areas" in BLM's draft Programmatic document.
7.
The Act proposes that the host county
gets 25% of all revenue that BLM receives from "renewables".
Nice gesture – but really intended as an incentive for County (and community) buy-in.
Problem: The County would receive some $
anyway from R/W’s rents – and under the current system - our PILT payments would
be reduced accordingly. To be
effective and a “real” incentive, said payments need to be exempted from
calculations and/or the PILT process revised so counties get compensation
payments for their full federal acreage – not get “maxed-out” as under the current
regs.
8.
Important to repeat: To be really effective, the Act
"must" either appropriate or authorize increased funding for BLM
rangers - dedicated to patrolling all said "Monument" and affected areas
- not for ranger time tied up in seminars or working DEA cases!
Otherwise - just another document on the shelf with no enforcement!
Signs alone don't work.
9.
We strongly advocate that the Act
should legislatively rescind the 1980 CDCA Plan's "contingent transmission
corridor" through Morongo – Johnson –
10. All Catellus parcels – outside monument
boundaries – currently conveyed to BLM or in the future - must remain under
BLM’s multiple-use authority.
WE REQUEST INVOLVEMENT IN THE
ACT’S AMENDMENTS.