BOCC supports wilderness management executive order
By Lyndsie Kiebert
Reader Staff
Bonner County commissioners voted unanimously Tuesday to sign a letter of support for a drafted executive order which would require land management practices in proposed wilderness areas to honor multiple-use tradition.
The Idaho Recreation Council and Idaho State Snowmobile Association drafted the executive order.
“We feel it is important to create management consistency while allowing for ongoing use in proposed wilderness areas in our region,” Commissioner Glen Bailey read from the letter. “These (recommended) wilderness areas — we’ve got three of them here in North Idaho — they are being controlled as wilderness areas to the most maximum extent.”
Samuels resident Dan Rose said he was concerned that the board’s support of the executive order seemed like a land management compromise prior to anything being officially dubbed wilderness.
“I see this as a mediation and potentially a usurpation of the (advisory) vote coming up in May,” he said. “If you (support) this you’re consenting, or mediating, before the vote even happens … This is saying you want to have a wilderness, but have it multiple use.”
Bailey told Rose he was “totally misinterpreting” the executive order’s goal.
“The Forest Service has been doing this, and they’ve actually been sued in Central Idaho over this, where they start managing an area as wilderness even though it is not,” Commissioner Dan McDonald said. “So (ISSA) has written this resolution to say, ‘Listen, until Congress says it’s wilderness, you can’t manage it as wilderness.”