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For Immediate Release
August 6, 2004
Contact: Bill Kresnak
Phone: (614) 856-1900

AMA OPPOSES SHUTDOWN OF 4 MILLION
ACRES TO OFF-HIGHWAY VEHICLES
PICKERINGTON,
Ohio -- The American Motorcyclist Association (AMA)
has expressed its opposition to a federal court
ruling this week that has the potential to shut
down an additional 4.1 million acres of the California
desert to all off-highway vehicles.
On Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Susan Illston
issued a ruling that could end all off-highway motorcycling
and ATV riding in areas of the desert that are designated
critical habitat for the desert tortoise, which
is listed as a threatened species under the Endangered
Species Act. Illston's ruling reverses an opinion
by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service that had allowed
activities including cattle grazing and motorized
recreation on some tortoise habitat controlled by
the federal Bureau of Land Management within the
25-million acre desert.
The ruling came in a lawsuit filed by opposing
forces in the debate over access to the desert:
AMA District 37 and the Center for Biological Diversity.
The AMA district organization argued that the Bureau
of Land Management should look into other factors
leading to a decline in the tortoise population,
most notably, diseases affecting the tortoises'
upper-respiratory systems and their shells. The
district asked that the BLM be ordered to consider
some 900 pages of research pointing to the diseases
as primary causes of tortoise deaths when developing
its plan for recovery of the species.
Meanwhile, the Center for Biological Diversity
argued that restrictions on motorized recreation
and cattle grazing imposed by the BLM did not provide
sufficient protection for the tortoise.
In ruling against District 37 and in favor of
the Center for Biological Diversity, Illston essentially
decided that no matter how minor a role off-highway
motorcyclists and grazing cattle play in the decline
of the tortoise, the BLM is obligated under federal
law to eliminate those activities throughout the
tortoise's critical habitat.
"This ruling completely ignores the fact that
off-highway motorcycling and ATV riding have played
little, if any, part in reducing the tortoise population,"
noted Nick Haris, AMA Western States Representative.
"Motorized recreation is already extremely restricted
on most of the tortoise habitat land. In fact, motorized
vehicles are either banned entirely or restricted
to using existing routes and ways in nearly every
part of the desert."
"The amount of public land available for recreation
has shrunk dramatically over the years, until today,
the areas available for open riding amount to a
mere 2 percent of the overall desert," Haris added.
"Closing an additional 4.1 million acres to all
off-highway vehicles would be another giant step
toward eliminating this legitimate form of recreation
from the desert."
AMA District 37 will appeal to the 9th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals in an effort to get Illston's ruling
reversed.
The American Motorcyclist Association, founded
in 1924, is a non-profit organization with more
than 265,000 members. The Association's purpose
is to pursue, protect and promote the interests
of motorcyclists, while serving the needs of its
members. For more information, visit the AMA website
at www.AMADirectlink.com, or call 1-800-AMA-JOIN.
For the latest news releases, visit the AMA News
Room at http://home.ama-cycle.org/newsroom.
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