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1978: Endangered American Wilderness Act
Noting that "these and other undeveloped national forest lands exhibiting wilderness
values are immediately threatened by pressures of a growing and more mobile population,
large-scale industrial and economic growth, and development and uses inconsistent
with the protection, maintenance, restoration, and enhancement of their wilderness
character...," Congress passed the Endangered American Wilderness Act of 1978.
Declaring it "in the national interest," this Congressional action also
came in response to an increasingly critical view of Forest Service inventories
and management of unprotected wildlands. In a pointed critique of the agency that
had often expressed pride in being the first to protect lands as wilderness, the
Endangered American Wilderness Act stated, "[these] areas are lands not being
adequately protected or fully studied for wilderness suitability by the agency responsible
for their administration."
In all, the Act added 13 new wilderness areas and expanded four others in ten western
states for a total addition of 1.3 million acres of national forest lands to the
National Wilderness Preservation System.
Source:
Public Law 95-237, Endangered American Wilderness Act of 1978, February
24, 1978.
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