So-Called Conservation Groups Betray Environmental Movement

- by Howie Wolke, Decem­ber 11, 2014, Wilder­ness Watch

My name is Howie Wolke and I live in the foothills of the Gal­latin Range in south­ern Mon­tana just north of Yel­low­stone Nation­al Park, about a mile from the greater Absaro­ka-Beartooth Wilder­ness Com­plex. I’ve been a wilder­ness guide/outfitter for back­pack­ing and canoe trips since 1978. I am also a past Pres­i­dent and the cur­rent Vice-Pres­i­dent of Wilder­ness Watch.

When I first applied to give a pre­sen­ta­tion at this con­fer­ence I intend­ed to share my thoughts about the state of our wilder­ness lands on the ground, giv­en my per­spec­tive from hav­ing guid­ed well over 500 wilder­ness treks. Most of these trips have been 5–10 days in dura­tion, and after 36 years I still guide trips from the Arc­tic Refuge to the Gila includ­ing many areas in between. Our company’s major focus, though, are the wild­lands of the Greater Yel­low­stone Ecosys­tem, my pri­ma­ry home range. There may be some­one out there with more guid­ing expe­ri­ence than I have but if so, I don’t know who that per­son is.

I men­tion this because unfor­tu­nate­ly, my guid­ing per­spec­tives will have to be shared out­side the con­text of this pan­el, per­haps over a beer some­where or at anoth­er forum. That’s because there’s lit­tle oppor­tu­ni­ty in this con­fer­ence to exam­ine as a group, with mean­ing­ful inter­change, the fail­ings of and poten­tial reme­dies for, effec­tive wilder­ness activism in the U.S. This is my attempt to focus at least a bit of atten­tion on a very big prob­lem that I will soon describe.

Let me be clear: I real­ly appre­ci­ate the stag­ger­ing effort put forth by con­fer­ence orga­niz­ers. They’ve secured some won­der­ful and well-known keynote speak­ers, like Ter­ry Tem­pest Williams, Sylvia Ear­le and Dave Fore­man — plus some famous media peo­ple, agency lead­ers and politi­cians, and that’s fine. But there were some glar­ing omis­sions and per­haps for the next Wilder­ness con­fer­ence we could also include folks such as Michael Soule’, George Wuerth­n­er and E. O. Wil­son (who advo­cates that 50% of the plan­et should be bio­di­ver­si­ty reserves, way more than most of the Amer­i­can Con­ser­va­tion Move­ment is will­ing to sup­port). I should also men­tion Car­ole King, a real wilder­ness activist hero in addi­tion to being a pret­ty fair singer/­song-writer.

And per­haps future con­fer­ences could be bet­ter struc­tured to facil­i­tate debate and real inter­change of ideas. In my mind, it is unfor­tu­nate that this very pan­el is com­pet­ing with 11 oth­er con­cur­rent pan­els. That’s an insult. I came all the way to Albu­querque to talk to 8% of the par­tic­i­pants? This con­fer­ence is a won­der­ful gath­er­ing of some real­ly great minds. But it’s very aca­d­e­m­ic, not at all con­ducive to hav­ing wilder­ness advo­cates real­ly exam­ine and debate as a group where we should be going after 50 years of Wilder­ness leg­is­la­tion in the Unit­ed States.

The truth is that a deep malaise afflicts wild­land con­ser­va­tion. Cer­tain­ly, there are some real­ly great activist groups out there, on the local, region­al and even nation­al lev­els. Such as Friends of the Clear­wa­ter, Wilder­ness Watch, West­ern Water­sheds Project, Friends of the Bit­ter­root, Alliance for the Wild Rock­ies, New Mex­i­co Wilder­ness Alliance, Swan View Coali­tion, and many more. But these out­fits are rou­tine­ly under­cut by a rel­a­tive­ly small cadre of big nation­al and region­al groups with big bud­gets, and often with obscene­ly big salaries for their exec­u­tives. Real activism that high­lights edu­ca­tion and orga­niz­ing wilder­ness defend­ers has been swept aside, replaced by col­lab­o­ra­tive efforts to des­ig­nate watered-down Wilder­ness. That’s where the mon­ey is, so the PEW Foun­da­tion and oth­er fun­ders who defend the sta­tus quo dic­tate strat­e­gy, favor­ing rad­i­cal com­pro­mise and col­lab­o­ra­tives where every­one holds hands and sings Kum­baya. These col­lab­o­ra­tives forge deals that make some peo­ple feel good but almost always the land and its crea­tures get the shaft. These out­fits work for leg­isla­tive notch­es in their Belt­way belts, at any cost — the costs often being spe­cial pro­vi­sions in Wilder­ness bills and rad­i­cal­ly trun­cat­ed Wilder­ness bound­aries. This cre­ates increas­ing­ly human-manip­u­lat­ed and tame “Wilder­ness”.

Unfor­tu­nate­ly, I am not sim­ply talk­ing about hon­est dif­fer­ences of opin­ion over strat­e­gy. I’m talk­ing about the Big Greens active­ly work­ing against con­ser­va­tion, rou­tine­ly team­ing up with cor­po­rate exploiters and oth­er anti-wilder­ness con­stituen­cies. There’s a fine line between strate­gic dif­fer­ences and actu­al­ly work­ing to oppose grass­roots con­ser­va­tion; and that line is now rou­tine­ly crossed. I’ll give you just a few exam­ples, which is all that my time allot­ment allows, but there are, sad­ly, plen­ty more.

So, of course I am dis­ap­point­ed but not sur­prised that TWS Pres­i­dent Jamie Williams is a con­fer­ence keynote, because – as I will short­ly explain – his orga­ni­za­tion has turned its back both on the Wilder­ness Act and it’s for­mi­da­ble but increas­ing­ly dis­tant pro-wilder­ness past. Now, before any­one accus­es me of get­ting per­son­al, I assure you that there is noth­ing per­son­al about this. I don’t know Jamie Williams; I’ve nev­er met him. He is prob­a­bly nice man who believes that he’s work­ing for the greater good. But I do know that his orga­ni­za­tion has aban­doned its for­mi­da­ble his­to­ry of wilder­ness defense and advo­ca­cy and that in The Wilder­ness Soci­ety, the buck stops in his office.

Yet, Stew­art Brand­borg, for­mer Exec­u­tive Direc­tor of TWS who helped pass the Wilder­ness Act, was not invit­ed to be a fea­tured speak­er here, and don’t let any­one tell you that he was, because that’s sim­ply not true. If they real­ly want­ed him they could have got him; he want­ed to come. He told me this in a per­son­al con­ver­sa­tion just a few days ago. But per­haps because some of the orga­niz­ers knew that he was plan­ning to strong­ly rep­ri­mand TWS/PEW/USFS etc., he remains in Mon­tana. Like many of us, Brandy is tru­ly hor­ri­fied by what’s hap­pened to the wilder­ness move­ment and he want­ed me to con­vey that mes­sage to this group.

In some ways, the prob­lem real­ly mate­ri­al­ized dur­ing RARE II, when a small group of TWS and Sier­ra Club Wash­ing­ton, D.C.-based employ­ees, I’m told led by Doug Scott (anoth­er of this conference’s keynote speak­ers, by the way) decid­ed that con­ser­va­tion­ists should pro­pose less than half of the avail­able nation­al for­est road­less acreage for Wilder­ness. My old friend Dave Fore­man was one of those D.C. strate­gists at the time, but to his cred­it, he lat­er renounced the RARE II strat­e­gy of min­i­mal pro­posed Wilder­ness. Unfor­tu­nate­ly, out of 80 mil­lion avail­able nation­al for­est road­less acres (62 mil­lion inven­to­ried in RARE II), the Carter Admin­is­tra­tion, con­strained by the con­ser­va­tion movement’s rad­i­cal­ly com­pro­mised vision, rec­om­mend­ed just 15 mil­lion acres for wilder­ness des­ig­na­tion. The dye was cast. The oppor­tu­ni­ty to define the wilderness/roadless debate on bio­cen­tric terms by advo­cat­ing Wilder­ness for all or near­ly all road­less areas was blown. Mil­lions of wild acres were sub­se­quent­ly bull­dozed, and with excep­tions, the wilder­ness move­ment has behaved like a beat­en dog ever since.

The Wilder­ness Soci­ety has fall­en far. Ear­li­er I com­plained about TWS Pres­i­dent Jamie Williams being a Keynote speak­er at this con­fer­ence. Here are just a few exam­ples why: TWS has opposed the efforts of Wilder­ness Watch and local con­ser­va­tion­ists to keep Georgia’s Cum­ber­land Island Nation­al Seashore wild, by sup­port­ing the Nation­al Park Ser­vices’ run­ning motor tours through this des­ig­nat­ed Wilder­ness. TWS has also encour­aged the BLM to allow ranch­ers to use ATV’s in the Owyhee Canyons Wilder­ness in Ida­ho, and it has sup­port­ed an extreme­ly absurd For­est Ser­vice plan to burn near­ly the entire Linville Gorge Wilder­ness in North Car­oli­na! Of equal shock val­ue, a cou­ple of years ago, TWS staffer Paul Spitler pro­duced a paper enti­tled “Man­ag­ing Wild­fires in Wilder­ness”. That paper sup­port­ed log­ging, road-build­ing and bull­doz­ing pre-emp­tive fire-breaks in des­ig­nat­ed Wilder­ness. I quote from this TWS Paper: “In short, any fire sup­pres­sion activ­i­ties that are allowed out­side of wilder­ness are allowed with­in wilder­ness as well”. That is an incor­rect inter­pre­ta­tion of the Wilder­ness Act, arguable at best, but why is TWS work­ing to pro­mote rather than restrain heavy-hand­ed man­age­ment in wilder­ness? Do they not recall Howard Zah­nis­ers’ poignant reminder that in Wilder­ness “we must be guardians, not gar­den­ers”?

And then there’s Green Moun­tain, in Washington’s Glac­i­er Peak Wilder­ness. That’s where the For­est Ser­vice ille­gal­ly replaced a dilap­i­dat­ed fire look­out with a brand-spank­ing new lookout/visitor cen­ter under the pho­ny guise of his­toric preser­va­tion. Wilder­ness Watch sued the For­est Ser­vice and won a legal slam-dunk vic­to­ry for Wilder­ness and for the Wilder­ness Act. The FS was ordered to remove the struc­ture. But TWS again under­cut con­ser­va­tion by work­ing to exempt Green Moun­tain from the require­ments of the Wilder­ness Act. And Con­gress did exact­ly that. Obvi­ous­ly, TWS is so deter­mined to appease the agen­cies that they have aban­doned their mis­sion, with zeal. When Stew­art Brand­borg was run­ning TWS, there were cer­tain­ly strate­gic dif­fer­ences among groups, sure, but this kind of under­min­ing could nev­er have occurred. Back in the 60’s and 70’s TWS under­stood the need to sup­port, not oppose, the grass­roots. But that was a long time ago. Long before TWS saw fit to put Wilder­ness decon­struc­tion­ist Bill Cronin on its Board of Direc­tors. Even worse, TWS is now pay­ing for­mer tim­ber lob­by­ist and Assis­tant Agri­cul­ture Sec­re­tary Mark Rey for lob­by­ing ser­vices! Rey has a ver­i­ta­ble his­to­ry of rad­i­cal anti-envi­ron­men­tal­ism and his lob­by­ing for TWS is like the NAACP hir­ing the Grand Drag­on of the Ku Klux Clan! Yes­ter­day we hard speak­ers Chris Barnes and Ken Brow­er elo­quent­ly describe this prob­lem in gen­er­al terms, and sug­gest that first and fore­most we all need to love wilder­ness. I sug­gest that we also stop hir­ing those who don’t!

TWS is not alone at work­ing to under­mine the efforts of oth­er con­ser­va­tion­ists. In my home region, the Greater Yel­low­stone Coali­tion (GYC) pro­duced a dis­play at a recent Mon­tana Wilder­ness Asso­ci­a­tion con­ven­tion extolling the virtues of broad-scale nation­al for­est thinning/logging for neb­u­lous and sci­en­tif­i­cal­ly incor­rect “for­est health” rea­sons. They did this as oth­er groups work to edu­cate the pub­lic about the fol­ly of the so-called “for­est health” claims made by some in the For­est Ser­vice and indus­try. With friends like GYC, who needs ene­mies? And a few years ago, MWA betrayed the Cen­tral Mon­tana Wild­lands Asso­ci­a­tion, a small grass­roots group based in Lewis­town, Mon­tana. These folks had sued the For­est Ser­vice over a trav­el plan allow­ing snow-machines in the Big Snowies WSA. But it turns out that MWA had cut a deal with the Mon­tana Snow­mo­bile Asso­ci­a­tion to allow snow-machines in part of the Wilder­ness Study Area. Then, MWA actu­al­ly inter­vened in the law­suit on behalf of the For­est Ser­vice and the snow­mo­bil­ers, oppos­ing the grass­roots effort. You did not hear me wrong.

The Wilder­ness Soci­ety, MWA and GYC have also refused to sup­port a grass­roots wilder­ness pro­pos­al for a 545,000 acre Gal­latin Range Wilder­ness in Mon­tana and Wyoming, and in a num­ber of instances that I’d be hap­py to detail when I’m not on the clock, have inten­tion­al­ly under­mined the efforts of a local group, Mon­tanans for Gal­latin Wilder­ness. A GYC rep­re­sen­ta­tive even told us that their group wouldn’t sup­port any more Wilder­ness than our Demo­c­rat Sen­a­tor Jon Tester sup­port­ed. Huh?

TWS and its cohorts seem to for­get that our job is to push, pull, cajole, embar­rass and encour­age the agen­cies and politi­cians to sup­port new Wilder­ness des­ig­na­tions and to keep des­ig­nat­ed Wilder­ness wild, even when – no, espe­cial­ly when – indi­vid­ual bureau­crats and politi­cians drag their heels. Our job is not to rub­ber stamp agency plans or to appease Con­gres­sion­al Democ­rats. We must chal­lenge pub­lic offi­cials when­ev­er their actions dimin­ish or degrade Wilderness!

I could con­tin­ue, but time is run­ning short. Again, I respect strate­gic dif­fer­ences with­in the con­ser­va­tion com­mu­ni­ty but what I’ve described is some­thing entire­ly dif­fer­ent. In the past I’ve coun­seled fel­low con­ser­va­tion­ists to avoid pub­lic crit­i­cisms of oth­er con­ser­va­tion groups. I thought we should not air our dirty laun­dry for all to see. But I’ve changed my mind. The sit­u­a­tion has gone too far. When a wheel is bro­ken, ignor­ing it won’t fix the prob­lem. The Con­ser­va­tion Move­ment has lost its way. John Muir, Bob Mar­shall and Howard Zah­nis­er spin in their graves. The malfea­sance must end.

I don’t know what the solu­tion is except to say that per­haps it’s time for groups such as TWS, MWA, GYC, The Nature Con­ser­van­cy (whose chief sci­en­tist Peter Karei­va argues that Wilder­ness has become irrel­e­vant) and maybe some oth­ers to sim­ply dis­band and get out of the way. Of course I know that this won’t hap­pen. I also appre­ci­ate that occa­sion­al­ly these out­fits do good work. But occa­sion­al­ly doesn’t cut it. Pro­tect­ing our price­less her­itage of both des­ig­nat­ed Wilder­ness and poten­tial des­ig­nat­ed Wilder­ness Areas is not going to get eas­i­er as the already over­pop­u­lat­ed Unit­ed States of Amer­i­ca con­tin­ues to expand its already bloat­ed amount of human bio­mass. As the U.S. pop­u­la­tion climbs toward 350 and 400 mil­lion Amer­i­cans, pres­sures on wilder­ness are going to increase from every imag­in­able direc­tion. Con­tin­ued destruc­tive behav­ior by so-called con­ser­va­tion groups sim­ply exac­er­bates an already dif­fi­cult situation.

In sum­ma­ry, recall that Ed Abbey once wrote that “the idea of wilder­ness needs no defense, only more defend­ers”. That’s true today, more than ever. Wilder­ness is about restraint and humil­i­ty. It teach­es one that we don’t know it all and nev­er will. There is wis­dom in the rocks and the trees and the deserts, the prairies and the tun­dra. Wild habi­tats speak to us, if we lis­ten. And one thing they tell me is to heed the wis­dom of the wilder­ness movement’s ear­ly vision­ar­ies. Now is not the time to aban­don their ship. Let’s quit play­ing “Let’s Make A Deal” and oth­er polit­i­cal games and get on with the real job of real­ly defend­ing what remains wild.

I real­ize that many peo­ple will find what I just dis­cussed to be pro­found­ly dis­turb­ing. I cer­tain­ly do. And believe me, I would have much rather dis­cussed what I’ve learned about wilder­ness on the ground from my 37 years as a wilder­ness guide. But I also feel strong­ly that to avoid this dif­fi­cult dis­cus­sion would have been neglect­ing my respon­si­bil­i­ty both to the Con­ser­va­tion Move­ment and to the Wilder­ness itself.

Howie Wolke, Vice Pres­i­dent Wilder­ness Watch
& Co-Own­er, Big Wild Adven­tures
Emi­grant, Montana

Howie Wolke co-owns Big Wild Adven­tures, a wilder­ness back­pack and canoe guide ser­vice based in Montana’s Par­adise Val­ley, near Yel­low­stone Nation­al Park. He is an author and long­time wilder­ness advo­cate, and is a past pres­i­dent and cur­rent board mem­ber of Wilder­ness Watch.


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