An ad hoc group, known as the North Dakota Wilderness Coalition, has put together a sensible and modest proposal to designate some 68,000 acres of public lands in North Dakota as permanent wilderness.">

A modest and extremely important wilderness proposal for North Dakota

 
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Aug 24, 2008 - 15:45:41 CDT
An ad hoc group, known as the North Dakota Wilderness Coalition, has put together a sensible and modest proposal to designate some 68,000 acres of public lands in North Dakota as permanent wilderness.

It’s a purely wonderful idea whose time has come. If we don’t act now, it’s an idea whose time will be soon be gone forever. As far as I can determine, there is no rational reason to oppose the proposal. Nobody’s ox is gored.

The proposed Prairie Legacy Wilderness will not be a contiguous unit. The coalition has designated six parcels for wilderness status, five diffused across the Badlands of western North Dakota, and a sixth in the Sheyenne National Grasslands southwest of Fargo. Why scatter the parcels in this way? Alas, we have so thoroughly domesticated all the rest of the wild lands of North Dakota that these are more or less the only remaining primitive islands in a sea of development, mostly oil development.

In the early 1970s, North Dakota possessed more than 500,000 acres that were deemed by the U.S. Forest Service (the National Grasslands) as “suitable for wilderness.” By 1977, that number had been cut in half. Today, there are about 40,000 prime “suitable for wilderness” acres left. Time is running out. As we stare over the brink toward an energy boom — an oil, coal, natural gas, wind and uranium rush — that will dwarf the three or four that have come to North Dakota before, we need to select a few precious acres of what is left and say: Not here!

The proposed wilderness areas are Bullion Butte in Billings County (9,720 acres), Kendley Plateau in Billings County (16,810 acres), Long X Divide in McKenzie County (10,670 acres), Twin Buttes in Golden Valley and Billings counties (13,590 acres), Lone Butte in McKenzie County (11,510 acres) and the Sheyenne Grasslands in Ransom and Richland counties (5,410) in southeastern North Dakota.

North Dakota is already graced by a few slivers of wilderness land. Chase Lake and Lostwood National Wildlife Refuges each contain a few thousand wilderness acres. The two units of Theodore Roosevelt National Park embrace a little wilderness, too, on the west bank of the Little Missouri River. These little parcels of already designated wilderness represent merely one-tenth of 1 percent of North Dakota’s land base. If the coalition’s humble and thoughtful proposals become law, another one-tenth of 1 percent of North Dakota will become wilderness.

Can we stand that much wildness in our midst? One-fifth of 1 percent of our total land base?

Our neighbors all have chosen to protect more wilderness than we do. South Dakota contains 77,570 acres of wilderness in two units; Montana 3,443,038 acres in 15 wilderness areas; Minnesota 816,268 acres in three units; Wyoming 3,111,232 acres in 15 units; Idaho 4,005,754 acres in six wilderness units; and Colorado 3,390,635 acres in 41 units.

Think of what this proposal really amounts to. A handful of little patches of wild land would be preserved forever as prairie, plains and Badlands remnants, as reminders of what the northern Great Plains once were. Why would anyone oppose a wilderness plan so intelligent, so well thought through and so carefully targeted?

And yet there are people who will oppose this proposal not on its merits, but merely because they cannot stand the idea that the conservation community would win a little victory in the land use wars of North Dakota and the American West. I hear the phrase “damned environmentalists” almost every day of my life. Some will oppose the plan because the word “wilderness” is such a loaded term at this dispirited, resource-hungry moment in American history. Look how this single, profoundly American word makes North Dakota’s political leaders squirm. Some will oppose the proposal because it violates the seemingly sacred American notion that nature exists to be exploited, extracted, developed and “improved.” Or because it is somehow disturbing that we could decide just to leave a parcel of our land alone, forever, just for the sake of leaving it alone.

Why do we need wilderness? Here’s why.

On a tiny percentage of our public lands, we need to remind ourselves of what America looked like before we began to slice and dice it with our industrial tools. A century ago, Theodore Roosevelt called upon us to preserve some bits of the America of Daniel Boone and Lewis and Clark. He wanted Americans of every generation to have a chance to reduce life to its lowest terms and sleep on the ground out where the wind rustles through the trees at dusk.

Forever.

We need to protect a few scattered sanctuaries where we can go to refresh the human spirit without being reminded of the amenities and the infrastructure and the daily hum and drum of our lives. It can be argued that we don’t need much such space, but we certainly need some. Roosevelt called American wilderness places “our cathedrals,” our Notre Dame, our St. Peter’s, our Parthenon, and he insisted that we treat them as lovingly as Europeans maintain their sacred grounds.

Above all, we need to show, even if only in this modest and symbolic way, that we have the capacity to restrain ourselves as we come to terms with the landscape on which we have chosen to live. Acts of restraint, as every theologian knows, dignify our experience, and bring a greater measure of purpose and integrity to everything we do. Fully 89 percent of North Dakota is farmed and ranched. Only 2.7 percent  is owned by the federal government. Over in our neighbor Montana, the feds (that is, we the people) own 29.9 percent.

This seems to me like a proposal that everyone can support, if only because it is so extremely modest. There are no “takings” here. Some state lands would have to be transferred to federal jurisdiction; a few acres of private inholding would need to be purchased to secure the integrity of the parcels. Nobody’s barn has to be torn down. Carefully regulated grazing and hunting still will be permitted on the wilderness acreage. If there is oil under these small parcels, it can almost certainly be reached by slant drilling.

Nobody can argue that this proposal represents a slippery slope or a Trojan Horse designed to open the door to bigger, wilder proposals that will follow if this one is successful. There is almost no land left in North Dakota that can qualify as wilderness. If this proposal succeeds, it’s the end of the wilderness story: just two-fifths of 1 percent of North Dakota, while the other 99.6 percent can continue forever to be not wilderness.

At this point in American history, most wilderness proposals require real sacrifice. They represent hard choices that have to be made in our attempt to balance the magnificence and sublimity of the American West against other important values like economic development and the sanctity of private property. This North Dakota proposal, to redesignate 68,000 acres already in the public domain as “wilderness” rather than “roadless,” is as painless a wilderness plan as ever has been advanced.

Let’s get it done. Now. While there’s still time.

(Clay Jenkinson is the director of the Dakota Institute. He is also the Theodore Roosevelt Scholar-in-residence at Dickinson State University. He lives in Bismarck. Contact Clay at Jeffysage@aol.com.)

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A modest and extremely important wilderness proposal for North Dakota
Comments

rancher wrote on Aug 30, 2008 7:27 AM:

" Do you have a job or is this it? Wouldn't a civilization want to protect "the way things were" by seeing livestock grazing the lands. Some of us have riding to do. Not for pleasure if you can believe that. Too much land has been taken from my family by the federal government for their own political reasons. You contradict yourself by saying,"this is only the beginning." Please leave us alone. "

TW wrote on Aug 28, 2008 8:34 AM:

" "less than 1% of our state, who can argue that"- look at your story and you will see that @ 22,000 acres are coming in McKenzie county. More land being taken off the tax roles so you can have a nice quiet hill to sit on and ponder our future. Seems like there must have been something worth preserving EAST of the Missouri river, find that and quit saving the rest of us from ourselves-TW "

Assistant news editor wrote on Aug 27, 2008 8:09 PM:

" Nodakman, I have checked the system for your comments and cannot find any recent comments with your name on them. Please try submitting them again. "

Nodakman wrote on Aug 27, 2008 7:50 PM:

" TO Online editor; I have posted twice recently and not been printed. Is there a problem with mt posts or is it something else? "

Hunt right wrote on Aug 27, 2008 7:24 AM:

" Well put Clay

"short-sighted men who in their greed and selfishness will, if permitted, rob our country of half its charm by their reckless extermination of all useful and beautiful wild things..." "

Mary Sand wrote on Aug 25, 2008 1:12 PM:

" I appreciate and agree with your clear statement of support for this modest but essential conservation proposal. "

Dave wrote on Aug 25, 2008 5:56 AM:

" Hey Snap, great idea for the world's biggest landfill. Then at least there would something to look at while driving around this friggin place. "

Snap wrote on Aug 25, 2008 5:14 AM:

" Heyb Robert Murph Myhre, why do you think that lifestyle is over? Because of an increase in population, that's why! How many children have you had? If even one, you have contributed to the death of the lifestyle you cherish. "

Snap wrote on Aug 25, 2008 5:08 AM:

" First, can CJ trim down his essays? Good grief. Second, I have a proposal. The entire state of ND should be used as America's land fill. That's right, I think these flat lands are useless but could serve as a great dump for the rest of the US. And there's money in sanitation! "

Prairie wrote on Aug 24, 2008 11:48 PM:

" Lovely story, Robert MM. We must have lived in the same neighborhood. Perhaps that's part of why I'm a Wilderness proponent to this day.
No private land would be "taken" for this proposal. Any sale, or no sale, would be totally up to the landowner.
Why do we think only trees are worthy of Wilderness? It is grass and sage, the rugged butte and open horizon that turns my heart.
To the reactionary rest, I say "Uff-da." "

Bruce Hemming wrote on Aug 24, 2008 9:04 PM:

" Are the private land owners willing sellers or this going to be another TAKING from the Federal Government? If it is already state land why in the world would you want to change to Federal land? The Federal Government screws up everything it touches. Look at the joke called the spotted owl. Any time environmentalist wants some thing reasonable you can bet your last dollar it is not for the good of the people. Leave the land under State control where North Dakotans can have a say instead of Limousine liberals in New York. That is the same lie the environmentalist used on the wolf it is reasonable once they are recovered a hunting season will be open. They LIED they never wanted a hunting season and the eco fascist sue and closed the wolf hunting down. . Don't trust them this about closing off the resourse. I bet it will be open to hunting but the roads you use to drive to your hunting spot will be closed off. America has enough Federal control on land say NO MORE. My tax dollars should never be used to buy private property it is not the Federal government job to buy land. "

Mike D. wrote on Aug 24, 2008 9:00 PM:

" Wilderness is a racist myth. That land has been occupied and managed by human beings for 10,000 years. Every major landscape historian is in agreement on that. Wilderness designation leads to wholesale destruction by megafire. Every wilderness area has been incinerated, some repeatedly. Those fire often leap across political boundaries and burn non-wilderness lands, public and private, in raging firestorms. Wilderness designation is the kiss of death to nature, humanity, and history. Those who deny it are perforce racist holocausters. "

Tony Dean NOT wrote on Aug 24, 2008 7:47 PM:

" It is not about "wilderness." It is not about "saving" or "restoring." Never was. It is about Control of resources. Always has been. "

WhatWilderness wrote on Aug 24, 2008 5:14 PM:

" Of course North Dakota has little wilderness preserves compared to states like MT, MN, CO, ID, WY, and even SD. They have millions and millions of acres of forests. ND does not have the same topography as these other states. If we had millions and millions of acres of forests...yes I, but I think we should be compared to more similar states such as Nebraska, Kansas, etc... but... even they have more forested acres than ND. "

Robert Murph Myhre wrote on Aug 24, 2008 4:14 PM:

" I agree whole heartedly! The open prairies north of the State Capitol Building,
where I roamed and "dreamed" so freely ... NO LONGER EXIST! They are now
Shopping Centers, a High School, some Commercial Buildings, and Houses
galore!!
Oh how I loved to trap Gophers and Ground Owls ... and hunt Rabbits in the
wintertime. The Prairie Chicken & Pheasant hunting was fun and exciting! NO MORE! LIFE and the freedom to roam ... are NEVERMORE! "

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