National
Mining Association For additional information, please contact: John Grasser: 202/463-2651 Karen Batra: 202/463-2651 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE May 9, 2000 The following is a statement by NMA President and CEO Richard L. Lawson on
the Administration's Public Lands Withdrawal Plan as outlined by the U.S. Forest
Service today: "The American people again are the losers in the latest land-grab initiative
proposed by the Clinton-Gore administration. The 'Roadless Area' land withdrawal
turns a cold shoulder to the rights of American citizens by dictating the removal
of 40 to 60 million acres of land from public use without adequate input from
the American Public or Congress. "The Roadless Area proposal issued by the U. S. Forest Service defies logic
and flies in the face of decades of federal law that requires the government
to strike a balance among a variety of resource uses and values. The forest
service proposal would deny access to public lands for recreation, wildfire
control and disease prevention, as well as resource development essential for
an American public that consumes 46,000 pounds of newly mined minerals each
year. "Clearly, the Clinton/Gore administration intends to take from the American
people millions of dollars in well-paying jobs and economic revenue by driving
all natural resource development off-shore. "Mining has touched less than one-quarter of 1 percent of all U.S. land, but
by further reducing the amount of land available for mineral exploration, federal,
state and local governments will continue to be deprived of hundreds of million
of dollars in tax payments. Also, thousands of high-paying jobs that would have
been created in the United States, will instead be created overseas. "The Clinton/Gore Administration has repeatedly refused to accept meaningful
public input or even discuss these proposals with elected state and local officials
from the affected areas in dealing with our country's public lands. "Their continued withdrawal of public lands, at best, ignores the statutorily
mandated principle of multiple use and, at worse, poses an insidious threat
to America's economic and national security interests." The U.S. mining industry produces coal, metals, building materials, and many
other essential minerals that define the daily lives of 267 million Americans.
The mining industry generates over $500 billion in total economic benefit each
year and helps to sustain nearly 5 million U.S. jobs.
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