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Crowdog
Business coalition formed to counter environmentalists
By TED MONOSON of the Missoulian D.C. bureau



WASHINGTON - A coalition of Western business and agricultural organizations has banded together to take on environmental organizations.

The groups are aiming to create a conservative version of popular environmental groups such as the Sierra Club and The Wilderness Society.

"We are going to have our own score card," said Jim Sims, the executive director of the Partnership for the West. "We're also going to have voter registration drives."

For years, environmental groups, such as the League of Conservation Voters, have graded lawmakers' environmental positions based on the votes that they cast.

According to its literature, the partnership plans to support environmentally sound energy development, common-sense regulations, preserving public access to federal lands, water for the future, increased jobs and prosperity, and greater state and local control.

The coalition specifically plans to push for enactment of energy legislation, an overhaul of federal forest management policy and "meaningful reform" of the Endangered Species Act and National Environmental Policy Act.

Sims, who was part of Vice President Dick Cheney's panel to create a national energy policy, addressed a handful of lawmakers and a plethora of lawmakers' aides and showed them a video at a barbecue Tuesday in the Capitol.

"While we work to build a strong West, there are those who want to turn back the clock," the video narrator said as pictures of mountains and streams intermingled with pictures of mining and timber operations. "Those opposed to responsible development have gained the upper hand in recent years. That's about to change."

A number of Montana and Wyoming organizations and companies that do business in the states are members of the partnership. The members include Arch Coal Co. Inc., Montana Petroleum Association, Teton Oil & Gas Corp., Wyoming Mining Association and Wyoming Stock Growers Association.

"They got a bunch of money from the oil industry and they are claiming it's a grass-roots organization," said Wilderness Society Northern Rockies spokesman Chris Mehl.

Sims said the Golden, Colo.-based organization is bipartisan, but there were few Democrats at the Tuesday meeting. Two members of Montana Democratic Sen. Max Baucus' staff were at the meeting.

Rep. Denny Rehberg, R-Mont., attended the organization's kickoff event in Denver on Sept. 26 and sent staff members to the meeting.

Rehberg stressed that the organization was not partisan and insisted that they planned to work with Democrats.

Rep. Mark Udall, D-Colo., was one of the few Democrats who showed up at the kickoff event in Denver.

"I dropped by and listened to what they had to say," Udall said Tuesday. "I'll work with them if they are truly interested in having a dialogue, but if they are just a front group for the extractive industries, I will oppose them."

While glancing over the list of member organizations Udall was concerned.

"It looks to me that they have work to do to bring some balance," Udall said.

Udall has frequently worked with environmental groups. His wife, Maggie Fox, is the Sierra Club's deputy executive director. Udall is planning a run for Senate against Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell, R-Colo.

http://www.missoulian.com/articles/2003/10...onal/news07.txt
Crowdog
Partnership for the West
http://www.partnershipforthewest.org/

QUOTE
Our Issues

Members of the Partnership have agreed to work in the following issue areas:

Continued Multiple Use of Public Lands -- Issues such as increased public access to public lands for responsible energy development, agricultural use, recreational access, responsible forest management, and others.
 
Common Sense Regulatory Reform -- Issues such as ESA reform, NEPA reform, Healthy Forests Initiative and others.

Environmentally Sound Energy Development -- Issues such as energy supply, energy infrastructure, improved split estate relations and others.

Effective Management of Water Resources -- Issues related to water quantity, quality and conservation initiatives and others.

More Jobs and Economic Prosperity -- Issues related to job creating development, taxes, manufacturing and commerce, business profitability, productivity issues and others.  

Greater State and Local Control -- Issues related to heavy handed federal policies related to land use, private property rights and others.  
Bluesky
You think extraction industries give a hoot about citizen access to public lands? Their MO (like crowdog's) is to put a human face to their greed. They want off-roaders to demand the repeal of laws meant to protect lands from mining, logging, farming and development. If you support this group and they wind up fencing you out of their projects or fields, you will have shot yourself in the foot. Of course, Crowley, millionaire owner of Extreme Garage http://extremegarage.com/ has his own reasons for wanting all natural areas open for exploitation.
Doorlord
Uh, thanks for pointing that out Blu, we all give up now.
SailAway
Bluesky is an Internet Troll, which means he is here only to be as contradictory and disturbing of the peace as possible. He thrives on your reactions, and your anger and hatred fuel his ugliness.

The best advice for dealing with an Internet Troll (look it up, there's lots of data) is to ignore him.

PLEASE DON'T FEED THE TROLL.
Valkema
:shock: Wow what kind of organization would fence us out of our own public lands.
SailAway
QUOTE
:shock: Wow what kind of organization would fence us out of our own public lands.


Sierra Club.

Oh, sorry, I thought you said PRIVATE lands.

Public lands?

Not enough room here to name those organizations I'm afraid :rant:

hehehe

Vicki
Bluesky
If there is a grazing allotment, no OHVs will be allowed. If there is a mining operation, NO OHVs will be allowed. If the fields are plowed and planted, No OHVs will be allowed. If the land is converted to homes or industry, no OHVs will be allowed.

that should be obvious. laugh.gif laugh.gif laugh.gif
Crowdog
[quote] Of course, Crowley, millionaire owner of Extreme Garage http://extremegarage.com/ has his own reasons for wanting all natural areas open for exploitation.[/quote]

Huh?
SailAway
hehehe

Yeah! Hey Jon... how come you never let your friends know?

:roll:
jhitesma
Geeze Jon you change your name to Kevin Bessco, move to Phoenix, start a new website....and don't even bother to tell anyone but BS!

Guess I know why you still use NT for your server now, with all those millions of dollars you probably can't spend it all fast enough biggrin.gif
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