Sierra Club Home Page   Environmental Update   My Backyard
chapter button
Explore, enjoy and protect the planet
Click here to visit the Member Center.         
Search
Take Action
Get Outdoors
Join or Give
Inside Sierra Club
Press Room
Politics & Issues
Sierra Magazine
Sierra Club Books
Apparel and Other Merchandise
Contact Us

Join the Sierra ClubWhy become a member? Explore, Enjoy and Protect

Wildlands campaign home page - click here.
Get an overview. Sign up for an e-newsletter. Find out what you can do to help.
Backtrack
Environmental Update Main
Wildlands Main
In This Section
Overview
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
Giant Sequoia National Monument
Yellowstone National Park
Everglades
Utah Wilderness
Maine Woods
Northern Rockies
Protect Our Coasts
Regional Campaigns
National Monuments
Special Reports
   
Also of interest....
Grazing Committee
Lands Protection Program
Lewis & Clark Campaign
Off-Road Vehicles
ESA: Wildlife & Endangered Species
Wildlife & Endangered Species Committee
Recreation Issues Committee

Get The Sierra Club Insider
Environmental news, green living tips, and ways to take action: Subscribe to the Sierra Club Insider!

Subscribe!

Protect Wildlands
Utah Wilderness

July 2008
Urgent Alert: Act to Protect Utah's Zion/Mojave Wilderness

Rimrocks in Escalante, UtahUtah's redrock country is one of this nation's most magnificent wild landscapes, a land of spectacular beauty dominated by towering buttes, red sandstone plateaus and deep, winding canyons. Unfortunately this land is at great risk from oil and gas exploration, which has intensified with the Bush administration's push for more drilling on public lands in the Rocky Mountains, and rampant abuse by off-road-vehicles.

America's Redrock Wilderness Act

The Sierra Club's Utah Wildlands Campaign is building congressional support for the passage of America's Redrock Wilderness Act . The Act would give wilderness designation to more than 9 million acres of federal public land in southern Utah, protecting them forever. An interim goal is to protect Utah's remaining wildlands from development and bad legislation that would damage the wilderness characteristics of the land and render it ineligible for the highest form of protection.

A major new threat developed in January 2003 when the Bush administration issued a final rule that would allow the Department of Interior to recognize thousands of bogus road claims on federal public land, based on an archaic provision referred to as RS 2477, which was part of an 1866 mining law. If this rule is allowed to stand, counties and private industry could bulldoze roads across National Parks and other public lands in Utah and many other western states areas with no regard for the land's wilderness characteristics.

The Sierra Club Utah Wilderness Task Force educates Sierra Club members and the public about the need to protect Utah's wildlands and encourages them to participate in this effort.


One Man's Work to Protect Utah Wilderness

There are many people across America who volunteer to help protect the red rock canyonlands. Rich Csenge is one of them. Rich has spoken from the heart to hundreds of people in Maine and helped to start a festival in Utah celebrating public lands. Watch this five-minute film of Rich’s story, set to the music of a symphony commissioned to celebrate “America’s Red Rock Wilderness Act,” or click here to see it on YouTube.


What You Can Do

take action
Protect Utah Wilderness

get outdoors
Go on an outing in Utah! Search for a Utah outing with the National Sierra Club, or take a trip with the Utah Chapter outings program.

get involved
The National Utah Wilderness Task Force works to protect the special places within the Utah Wilderness Coalition's "Citizens' Proposal" for wilderness on Bureau of Land Management lands in the state of Utah by encouraging Sierra Club members to become actively involved in the campaign to achieve protection for Utah's wild lands. The Task Force oversees the Sierra Club’s participation in the national campaign beyond the boundaries of the state of Utah. It has a coordinating committee of eight members, support from Sierra Club National Field and Public Lands Team staff, and active participation from volunteers across the country. To learn how you can help, contact Task Force Chair Bob Jordan (below).

contact
For more information, contact Bob Jordan, Chair, Sierra Club Utah Wilderness Task Force; Lawson LeGate, Sierra Club Salt Lake City Field Office; Myke Bybee, Public Lands and Wilderness staffer.

friends in the fight
Utah Wilderness Coalition: Learn the amazing history of America's Redrock Wilderness Act and how a citizen survey revealed that millions of acres of land in Utah qualified for wilderness protection.

find out more

Blue Hills Badlands


Photo of Rimrocks in Escalante, Utah, courtesy James Kay; used with permission. Blue Hills Badlands photo © Ray Wheeler; used with permission.

Up to Top


HOME | Email Signup | About Us | Contact Us | Terms of Use | © 2008 Sierra Club