12-02-2004, 03:24 PM
Bush signs largest designation of Nevada wilderness ever
Scott Sonner THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
RENO, Nev. -- President Bush has signed into law a measure conservationists say is the single largest designation of federally protected wilderness in Nevada history -- a total of about 1,200 square miles north and east of Las Vegas.
The legislation is billed as a compromise between environmentalists who want permanent protection of intact wild lands and developers who want more water for Clark County.
The new law creates 14 new wilderness areas protecting wildlife habitat, rugged mountain peaks, limestone cliffs, fragile caves and archaeological resources across a total of 768,000 acres, an area about half the size of the state of Delaware.
It directs the Bureau of Land Management to auction up to 90,000 acres of federal land in the rural county north of Las Vegas.
It also establishes a utility corridor that would allow the Southern Nevada Water Authority to build a pipeline to tap into groundwater in eastern Nevada and draw as much as 200,000 acre-feet of water per year -- enough for more than half a million households. This story appeared in The Daily Herald on page C4.
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Scott Sonner THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
RENO, Nev. -- President Bush has signed into law a measure conservationists say is the single largest designation of federally protected wilderness in Nevada history -- a total of about 1,200 square miles north and east of Las Vegas.
The legislation is billed as a compromise between environmentalists who want permanent protection of intact wild lands and developers who want more water for Clark County.
The new law creates 14 new wilderness areas protecting wildlife habitat, rugged mountain peaks, limestone cliffs, fragile caves and archaeological resources across a total of 768,000 acres, an area about half the size of the state of Delaware.
It directs the Bureau of Land Management to auction up to 90,000 acres of federal land in the rural county north of Las Vegas.
It also establishes a utility corridor that would allow the Southern Nevada Water Authority to build a pipeline to tap into groundwater in eastern Nevada and draw as much as 200,000 acre-feet of water per year -- enough for more than half a million households. This story appeared in The Daily Herald on page C4.
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