| BLUERIBBON
COALITION, INC. NEWS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT:
Paul Turcke, Esq. - 208.331.1807
Brian Hawthorne, - 801.484.3940
Don Amador, - 925.625.6287
Clark Collins, - 208.233.6570
DATE: December 27, 2000
RECREATION ACCESS GROUPS WIN LEGAL FIGHT
SALT LAKE CITY -- On
December 22 a federal judge gave pro-access recreation
advocates a stunning victory when he ruled against a
national preservationist group's legal effort to ban
off-highway vehicle (OHV) use on millions of acres in
Utah.
After listening to six days of evidence and
arguments, U.S. District Judge Dale A. Kimball denied a
motion for preliminary injunction filed by the Southern
Utah Wilderness Alliance (SUWA) which sought to ban OHV
use in nine popular recreation areas managed by the
Bureau of Land Management (BLM). Beyond denying SUWA's
request for an injunction, Judge Kimball granted a
motion to dismiss filed by the Blue Ribbon Coalition (BRC)
and the Utah Shared Access Alliance (USA-ALL) and ruled
that the Court had no jurisdiction to consider SUWA's
claims regarding the disputed areas. While BLM had
opposed SUWA's request for an injunction, it failed to
join in the recreational groups' motion to dismiss.
"Hopefully this decision will help stop the
'management through litigation' model that seems popular
with some activists," said Paul Turcke, lead
attorney for the BRC and USA-ALL. "The court
recognized that administrative agencies, not federal
courts, are the proper place to create effective
solutions to recreation management challenges."
"Access groups have repeatedly rallied to assist
the BLM in striking a balance between use and protection
of public lands," said Brian Hawthorne, USA-ALL
executive director. "The OHV community is often
unfairly vilified by the media and wilderness advocacy
groups. This decision provides an important step in the
right direction away from that unfair stereotype."
Don Amador, the western representative for the BRC,
added, "We have long argued that effective
solutions to recreation management are best reached when
the agency involves all users and local interests in its
decision making process. Perhaps this decision will have
an impact on similar lawsuits filed by green groups
against the BLM and Forest Service in other states and
will convince the agencies to do what is right instead
of doing what they think will avoid a lawsuit."
"The BRC decided four years ago to start a legal
action team to empower our member organizations to
protect legitimate multiple-use access to public lands.
I believe this legal victory in Utah shows just how
important that commitment is as OHV recreation and
government land agencies face a blizzard of 'ban-it-all'
lawsuits filed by anti-access groups throughout the
country," Amador concludes.
The areas SUWA unsuccessfully sought to close to
motorized vehicles include the San Rafael Swell, Behind
the Rocks near Moab, Indian Creek in San Juan County,
Wildhorse Mesa near Captial Reef National Monument, and
the Coral Pink Sand Dunes.
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