KMMS: EPA Adds Montana For Targeted Superfund Sites
Senator Steve Daines just made the statement that the Environmental Protection Agency include both Montana’s Silver Bow Creek/Butte Area and Anaconda Co. Smelter Superfund sites that need immediate and intense attention. The administrator Scott Pruitt is targeting places in the United States for his list of places that should be represented. This comes in response to a letter Senator Daines sent to Pruitt urging the agency to not forget Montana “By including the Silver Bow Creek/Butte Area and Anaconda Co. Smelter sites among the EPA’s targeted Superfund sites, these sites will now receive the attention, focus and prioritization that these
Ripon Advance: Daines bill opens up public lands 40 years after feds’ recommendation
U.S. Sen. Steve Daines on Thursday introduced legislation to protect citizens’ public land access and use in Montana following requests from the Montana State Legislature and local communities. The Protect Public Use of Public Lands Act would release 449,500 acres of the total more than 1 million acres in Montana’s Wilderness Study Areas (WSA), as the U.S. Forest Service has recommended. The land would be available for boosting Montana’s $6 billion outdoor economy and its agriculture economy, according Daines’ office. “As a fifth-generation Montanan and an avid outdoorsman, I know how important public use of our public lands is to
Great Falls Tribune: Protecting public use of public lands
In 1977, President Carter signed a law that required the Forest Service to study 973,000 acres in Montana to determine if they were suitable for wilderness. The findings were to be reported in five years and Congress was to take action afterward. The Forest Service completed the study and determined that several of the study areas in Montana were not suitable for wilderness in its final plan. Thirty-five years later – we’re still waiting for D.C. to get its job done and release the study areas. I’ve introduced the Protect Public Use of Public Lands Act, which will take action
Missoulian: Daines bill would release wilderness study areas for other uses
Five wilderness study areas left in legislative limbo for 35 years would be released to multiple use planning under a proposed bill by Sen. Steve Daines, R-Montana. The 449,500 acres of wild country include the Blue Joint and Sapphire WSAs south and east of Hamilton, the Big Snowies WSA near Lewistown, the Middle Fork Judith WSA south of Stanford and the West Pioneer WSA east of Wisdom. “These lands were to be studied for five years and the findings reported to the president,” Daines said in a conference call to reporters on Thursday. “We are now 35 years past due
Military Technologies: NASF Presents Senator Steve Daines with Bernard L. Orell Award
WASHINGTON—The National Association of State Foresters (NASF) today presented Senator Steve Daines of Montana with the 2017 Bernard L. Orell Award. The award is presented periodically to a member of Congress who has made a significant contribution to state and private forestry. More than 60 percent of forests in the United States are private and state owned forests and nearly 90 percent of the nation’s wood supply comes from these forestlands. Senator Daines has been a champion of active forest management, for example methods that include thinning the nation’s forests in order to make them more resilient to insects, disease,
Great Falls Tribune: Daines submits legislation to remove 449,500 acres from Montana’s Wilderness Study Areas
Public lands and protections remain a hot topic in Washington D.C. Thursday as Sen. Steve Daines, R-Mont., introduced legislation to remove 449,500 acres in Montana’s Wilderness Study Areas. Daines describes the “Protect Public Use of Public Lands Act” as an effort to follow bottom-up requests from the state legislature and local communities. “As a fifth-generation Montanan and an avid outdoorsman, I know how important public use of our public lands is to Montanans,” Daines said in a statement. “Forty years of D.C. paralysis has frozen our access and use of public lands. It’s time to keep public lands in public hands.” The WSAs included
Bozeman Daily Chronicle: Bozeman boy lights U.S. Capitol Christmas tree
As night fell on the nation’s Capitol, a nearly 80-foot-tall Engelmann spruce picked from Montana’s Kootenai National Forest and adorned with 3,500 hand-made ornaments stole the spotlight from the Washington Monument. Ridley Brandmayr, an 11-year-old from Bozeman chosen by Montana’s senior Sen. Jon Tester to light the tree, looked on in anticipation as the state’s delegation and other speakers kicked off the event. Brandmayr, wearing a black suit and white pressed buttoned-down shirt, said he was a little nervous “because I was in front of America.” The sixth grader from Sacajewa Middle School said his social studies instructor told him
Montana Standard: Sen. Daines urges EPA’s top administrator to put Butte on ‘Top 10’ list
U.S. Sen. Steve Daines, R-Mont., urged the Environmental Protection Agency’s top administrator Scott Pruitt to consider the Silver Bow Creek/Butte Area in Pruitt’s “Top 10” list in a letter sent earlier this week. An EPA report, released in late July, laid out recommendations for how Pruitt could speed up the Superfund process. Creating a “Top 10” list of Superfund sites that Pruitt would personally oversee was one of the suggestions. There is no time frame for how quickly Pruitt will name his Top 10, EPA spokesperson Enesta Jones said in a written statement from the Washington, D.C. office Wednesday. Daines
Daily Inter Lake: Daines Names Kalispell’s Ted Koenig As Montanan Of The Week
U.S. Sen. Steve Daines recognized Kalispell resident Ted Koenig as the Montanan of the Week for his role in humanitarian relief efforts in the U.S. Virgin Islands following the destruction of hurricanes Maria and Irma. Daines’ statement of recognition was entered into the official Congressional Record Dec. 1, and highlighted Koenig’s selfless contributions in the U.S. territory. “Helping others in need is common in Big Sky Country and Ted’s journey to St. Thomas is another example of this ethic in action,” Daines wrote. “It comes as no surprise that Ted served three years in the Peace Corps and was stationed