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VALLE VIDAL – VALLEY OF ABUNDANT LIFE
On June 14, 1985 during the dedication of the Valle Vidal as a unit of the Carson National Forest, US Forest Service Chief Max Peterson told the assembled dignitaries, government employees, and ranching neighbors that the Forest Services would manage the unit to protect its prime resource – its wildlife.
Located in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains of northern New Mexico, the Valle Vidal is home to a magnificent array of wildlife, including 60 species of mammals, 33 species of reptiles and amphibians, and 15 varieties of fish. In addition to being a home and calving ground to the State’s largest elk herd, the Valle Vidal contains mountain lion, turkey, buffalo, and the native Río Grande cutthroat trout.
The Valle Vidal also comprises the headwaters of the Río Costilla in the Río Grande watershed, and numerous streams in the Arkansas River drainage. As a source of fresh water, wildlife, firewood, and grazing, the Valle Vidal is an important resource base for the agrarian communities of northern New Mexico and southern Colorado. With its hiking trails, ponds, lakes and grazing lands, the Valle Vidal is a special place for hunters, anglers, ranchers, boy scouts, hikers, skiers, wildlife viewers, photographers, and tourists from across the nation.
Destruction of the Valle Vidal will not only irreparably harm wildlife populations and obliterate one of New Mexico’s most spectacular vistas, but will impact the rural economy that depends upon the Valle Vidal – from ranchers to outfitters to the 3,000 Boy Scouts who camp each year within the Valle Vidal’s meadows.
With the realization that coalbed methane production will disrupt the healthy ecosystem of the Valle, as well as the activities of the many human users of the site, the Coalition for the Valle Vidal seeks to protect the 40,000 acres at risk to energy development. With six million acres of the Raton Basin already under production, our primary goal is to ‘set aside’ this special place, and protect the Valle Vidal from all energy development, now and in the future.
On a broader scale, our effort is part of a national movement to reform our national energy policy. Currently, this policy strives to shut the public out of the process, fails to hold public agencies and industries accountable for impacts on the environment and surrounding communities, and in most cases, makes the de facto assumption that energy production is the most important use of public lands.
The Valle Vidal is a tremendous opportunity for New Mexicans to unequivocally state that public lands are held in trust for all Americans – not just the highest bidders.
COAL-BED METHANE
Coalbed methane development involves pumping off large amounts of water trapped in coal seams with methane gas. The process of extracting the gas includes building well pads, roads, pipeline corridors, and associated facilities like compressor stations and dehydration units. Other problems associated with coalbed methane development include the injection of hazardous chemicals into our aquifers during drilling processes; soil and groundwater contamination from toxic waste pits; the massive depletion of water from coal seams; subsidence; the leaking of methane at the surface, which impacts wildlife; and pipeline and well explosions, such as occurred in Carlsbad, NM, in March 2004. Under current guidelines, gas producers are not held liable for many damages effecting public health and safety, or the environment.
Coalbed methane development is already having devastating effects in New Mexico’s San Juan Basin and all across the western United States, where companies are scraping bare large swaths of land and contaminating air, soil and water resources with toxic, hazardous, and carcinogenic materials. If allowed, this development will have serious air, water, soil, noise, habitat, and community impacts that will change the Valle Vidal forever.
COALITION FOR THE VALLE VIDAL
In 2004, Amigos Bravos and a small group of partners established the Coalition for the Valle Vidal in order to mount an aggressive campaign to defeat Bush administration plans to fast-track coalbed methane (CBM) drilling in the pristine Valle Vidal area of the Carson National Forest. Amigos Bravos serves as chair of the Coalition Steering Committee and is the Coalition’s fiscal agent. As lead organization in the Coalition, Amigos Bravos will continue to use its operating funds and staff time to build the organizational capacity of the Coalition.
We have had considerable success, as evidenced by the over 70,000 letters sent to the Forest Service and legislation introduced by Representative Udall and Senator Bingaman to permanently withdraw the Valle Vidal from extractive industry. However, the Forest Service, under pressure from the Bush administration, is committed to going through with the process that could lead to opening up the Valle Vidal to CBM leasing and drilling. They are doing so despite an enormous and on-going public campaign in favor of permanently protecting the Valle Vidal, despite the Governor’s support for such protection, despite legislation from two Congressional members – despite the public outrage.
We seek to halt El Paso Corporation’s plans to drill the Valle Vidal, force the Forest Service to adopt a Citizen Alternative for the Valle Vidal management plan, and ensure that the Valle Vidal is permanently protected by Congress from extractive industry.
The Coalition, which includes over 400 New Mexico local governments, private businesses, and community organizations, as well as more than 70,000 individuals throughout the political spectrum across New Mexico and the USA. We are pursuing multiple options to blunt or prevent the Forest Service from opening up the Valle Vidal to coalbed methane leases and drilling. These include – but are not limited to:
- Building a large and diverse constituency to apply public pressure on the New Mexico Congressional delegation and the Forest Service to provide permanent protection for the Valle Vidal
- Instituting regulatory roadblocks to drilling by nominating McCrystal and North Ponil creeks for protection under the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act and the Valle Vidal as a Traditional Cultural Property under the Historic Preservation Act, as well as working with Representative Udall and Senator Bingaman to win passage of their bills to permanently withdraw the Valle Vidal from extractive industry
Producing legal and technical reports, fact sheets, and power point presentations to bolster the economic, cultural, and social arguments for permanent protection, to educate the public and decision-makers regarding environmental and economic impacts from coalbed methane development, and to develop a Citizen’s Alternative to drilling. |