The Northern Rocky Mountains ecosystem in the United States is known by ecologists, biologists, and naturalists as one of the last areas of the contiguous United States that is relatively undeveloped enough and large enough to support a functioning ecosystem. The Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act is designed to protect this ecosystem and the many threatened and endangered species such as grizzly bears (threatened), bull trout (threatened), sockeye salmon (endangered only in Snake River Evolutionary Significant Unit, secure elsewhere), and Canadian lynx (threatened only in lower U.S. 48 states, secure elsewhere), while creating jobs that restore old roads and clear cuts. The Alliance for the Wild Rockies based in Helena, Montana has been campaigning for the legislation for two decades with the help of numerous Congresspersons, celebrities, and grassroots groups such as the Sierra Club and the Wilderness Society. The legislation has been introduced and discussed in Congress five times since 1993, most recently in November 2011 with 34 co-sponsors by December 2012.
The legislation would affect roadless areas in five states, including 9500000acres in Idaho, 7 million in Montana, 5 million in Wyoming, 750,000 in eastern Oregon and 500,000 in eastern Washington. The total includes 3e6acre in Yellowstone, Glacier and Grand Teton national parks. The NREPA does not affect private land.[1]
The legislation will:
Congress | Short title | Bill number(s) | Date introduced | Sponsor(s) |
| Latest status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
102nd Congress | Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act of 1992 | September 15, 1992 | Peter H. Kostmayer(D-PA) | 4 | Died in committee | |
103rd Congress | Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act of 1993 | July 14, 1993 | Carolyn Maloney(D-NY) | 63 | Died in committee | |
104th Congress | Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act of 1995 | February 7, 1995 | Carolyn Maloney(D-NY) | 47 | Died in committee | |
105th Congress | Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act of 1997 | April 23, 1997 | Chris Shays(R-CT) | 71 | Died in committee | |
106th Congress | Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act of 1999 | February 2, 1999 | Chris Shays(R-CT) | 110 | Died in committee | |
107th Congress | Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act of 2001 | February 6, 2001 | Chris Shays(R-CT) | 153 | Died in committee | |
108th Congress | Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act | March 5, 2003 | Chris Shays(R-CT) | 185 | Died in committee | |
110th Congress | April 20, 2007 | Carolyn Maloney(D-NY) | 139 | Died in committee | ||
111th Congress | February 11, 2009 | Carolyn Maloney(D-NY) | 104 | Died in committee | ||
112th Congress | November 3, 2011 | Carolyn Maloney(D-NY) | 34 | Died in committee | ||
113th Congress | March 14, 2013 | Carolyn Maloney(D-NY) | 31 | Died in committee | ||
114th Congress | February 13, 2015 | Carolyn Maloney(D-NY) | 37 | Died in committee | ||
June 6, 2016 | Sheldon Whitehouse(D-RI) | 8 | Died in committee | |||
115th Congress | April 25, 2017 | Carolyn Maloney(D-NY) | 59 | Died in committee | ||
April 25, 2017 | Sheldon Whitehouse(D-RI) | 12 | Died in committee | |||
116th Congress | February 22, 2019 | Carolyn Maloney(D-NY) | 44 | Died in committee | ||
March 14, 2019 | Sheldon Whitehouse(D-RI) | 15 | Died in committee | |||
117th Congress | March 10, 2021 | Carolyn Maloney(D-NY) | 44 | Referred to committee | ||
March 21, 2021 | Sheldon Whitehouse(D-RI) | 11 | Referred to committee |
Carolyn B. Maloney, representative from the 14th district of New York most recently introduced the bill on November 3, 2011, and it had 34 cosponsors as of December 4, 2012.[3] Representative Maloney also introduced the legislation in February 2009, as of December 1, 2009 there were 103 co-sponsoring Congresspersons in the House of Representatives.[4] The singer Carole King, a resident of Custer County, Idaho, has testified before Congress in 1994, 2007 and 2009 in support of the act.
Opponents to the NREPA state that there will be a loss of extraction jobs in the northern Rockies; mining, logging, and oil/gas production as a whole account for many of the jobs in the five affected states. Economics professor Tom Power, Ph.D. from the University of Montana has found that industries based on extracting resources from the land are more prone to "boom and bust" economic cycles, creating ghost towns, and unstable living conditions, while economies that are based around wilderness areas are more sustainable and have higher than average job growth rates.[5]
There are other wildland protection projects currently being endeavoured by citizens around the world. In North America there are four wildlife corridors that have been proposed by the Wildlands Network, each providing a highway, called a "wildway", for migrating creatures to mitigate the effects of climate change: the Pacific Wildway running from Baja to Alaska, Boreal Wildway running west–east from Alaska, through Canada, to the northeastern shores of North America, the Eastern Wildway running from Everglades in Florida to the Arctic, and the Western Wildway also called the "spine of the continent" runs from southern Mexico along the Rocky Mountains up into the Arctic.[6] The Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation Initiative (also known as Y2Y) is a bi-national NGO that promotes the conservation of habitats and wildlife movement ability from the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem to the Arctic Circle.[7]