Tuesday, December 16, 2025
51.0°F

Protect the Rocky Mountain Front

Bob Brown | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 13 years, 9 months AGO
by Bob Brown
| March 7, 2012 6:32 AM

It’s been about 30 years since Montana has had any new federally designated wilderness. In my view, that is not necessarily bad. Wilderness has its place, but so do forest management activities and the production of wood products.

From my experience, though, if there is any place in our state that seems appropriate for wilderness, it is the Rocky Mountain Front. Words can’t describe its spectacular grandeur.

Sen. Max Baucus recently introduced the Rocky Mountain Front Heritage Act, which would preserve about 67,000 acres of wilderness along the Rocky Mountain Front in an area that has been wilderness since the beginning of time.

What the bill proposes that is new is the creation of a 207,000-acre “conservation management area” bordering the wilderness. This truly new legal designation resulted from meetings over several years among landowners and other interested parties in and around the affected area.

All traditional uses would be protected within the boundaries of the management area, including grazing of livestock, motorized recreation on established trails, chainsaw use and wood gathering, some sustainable forestry, and hunting and fishing. Firefighting, combating pine beetles and other forest insects, and a coordinated program of weed eradication are also provided for in the management area.

The Heritage Act would establish a firm legal framework for keeping existing uses as they have always been, while keeping one of the world’s most majestic panoramas as awe-inspiring as it has always been.

The ground-up approach that resulted in the CMA concept is how government should function. If government concentrated on working directly with real people where applicable in the law-making process, the resulting laws would be better accepted and make more sense.

Maybe the made-in-Montana Rocky Mountain Front Heritage Act will become the national model for local involvement in the management of public lands.

Bob Brown is a former Montana Secretary of State and State Senate President.

ARTICLES BY BOB BROWN

November 23, 2011 8:23 a.m.

Roosevelt's lesson: If you have to hit, hit hard

Nolan Hotel, Mingusville, (later Wibaux) Montana, autumn, 1884. Young, bespectacled Theodore Roosevelt was tired and hungry. He had been searching for stray horses since dawn. As he entered the inn TR described what happened.

June 17, 2014 6:53 a.m.

Time to shine the light on dark money

The venerable Barry Goldwater warned that, “Unlimited campaign spending eats at the heart of the democratic process. It feeds the growth of special interest groups created solely to channel money into political campaigns. It creates an impression that every candidate is bought and owned by the biggest givers. And it causes elected officials to devote more time to raising money than to their public duties.”

November 15, 2014 7:36 a.m.

The most important election in U.S. history

Political candidates usually passionately proclaim that the election in which they are running is “the most critical in a generation” or the “the most important in modern history.” Despite the hype, elections, including the one that just occurred, are rarely noteworthy events or turning points in history.