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SAVE STONY VALLEY |
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THANK YOU for you help in saving our special wilderness! |
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THE PROBLEM Should a Wild & Scenic River be part of a firing range? What is the "Swap"? What does Stony Creek offer? ORGANIZATIONS that support our efforts to preserve Stony Creek Valley DIRECTIONS to Stony Creek and a map and links to other maps and rail-trail information PHOTOS in the Valley HOW TO HELP links to legislators and links to other websites BACKGROUND how Stony Creek became the first component in PA's Wild & Scenic River Program. THE
STONY CREEK COALITION- successfully protecting the Stony Creek Valley
Since 1974!
If you have a question or
just want to write in support please use this link info@savestonyvalley.com
Stony Creek Valley Coalition, Inc. 445 Hale Avenue Schedule: THE NEXT MEETING: Oct 7 7pm Nino's Cafe, on route 443 just east of the racetrack in Grantville. Everyone is welcome. We usually buy and share pizza. STONY VALLEY SGL 211 Fall Foliage Drivethrough: Most years the Game Commmission opens the gates to the Stony Valley Rail-Trail to motor vehicles on a Sunday when the leaves are turning. For 2008- from the PGC website we have: Sunday, Oct. 19, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., State Game Land 211, which encompasses more than 44,000 acres in a three-county area. The tour will start at the Ellendale gate in Middle Paxton Township, Dauphin County, just northeast of Dauphin Borough. The 19-mile trip will be made along an abandoned railroad bed, and will end at Goldmine Road, southwest of Tower City, Schuylkill County. Game Commission personnel will be on hand to explain various points of interest, including wildlife habitat improvement projects. Walkin Jim Concert 2008: One of America's most unique folksingers and backcountry travelers, Walkin' Jim Stoltz, on tour from the mountains of Montana, will bring his powerful multi-media show, Forever Wild, to the Carlisle Theatre, 40 West High Street, Carlisle, PA, on Saturday, November 8, 2008, at 7:30 p.m. Benefit for the Appalachian Trail Museum, more information at www.atmuseum.org |
On May 2 officials from the National Guard at Indiantown Gap announced to the local media that they were, at least temporarily, ceasing the construction of the Multi Purpose Training Range (MPTR) that would have necessitated use of 900 acres in Stony Creek, State Gameland 211. Thanks to all of you who worked so hard to save Stony Valley once again. The funds intended for the MPTR will be used for other projects by the Pennsylvania National Guard. Although this appears to be good news, the National Guard is completing the Environmental Assessment for the project and considers the Use Agreement with the PA Game Commission to be a viable document. What is at Stake Just
14 miles north of Harrisburg PA is Saint Anthony's Wilderness, which at
44,000 acres is the largest wilderness area in central or eastern PA. Stony
Creek Valley is the portion of this wilderness most easily reached from
Harrisburg and Lebanon. In fact, it is within a 30 mile drive of 700,000
citizens. 28
years ago the Stony Creek Valley Coalition fought to save Stony Creek Valley
by having Stony Creek designated as a Scenic River under the Pennsylvania
Wild and Scenic Rivers Act. We thought then that we had saved this
gem— part of —by preventing any use
other than as wilderness. The PA Game Commission (PGC), which owns the
Valley as part of State Game Land 211—purchased
in part with Federal funds—was
charged with its protection.
How
our Largest Eastern PA Wilderness Was Saved The First Time
In
1974 PP&L wanted to dam the Creek and flood the Valley to generate
electricity. The Stony Creek Valley Coalition formed in response to this
threat and in 1979 PP&L abandoned its plans. In 1980, the General
Assembly made Stony Creek the first river in Pennsylvania’s Wild &
Scenic River Program. The protected land is 18,000 acres bounding Stony
Creek from ridgetop to ridgetop.
A
Needy Neighbor
Fort
Indiantown Gap (FTIG), a Pennsylvania National Guard facility, is very
small, hemmed in by public roads and bounded on the south, west and east by
towns, farms and homes. To the north is the wilderness of Stony Creek
Valley. In 1998, the Guard began planning a new training range for tanks.
The Environmental Impact Statement for the range recognized the Valley’s
worth, but claimed that there would be no impact. However, in 2006 we
learned that the EIS was invalid since it was prepared without conducting a
ricochet analysis for the firing range. When a ricochet analysis was finally
prepared in 2007, it showed that hundreds, if not thousands, of rounds from
artillery and cannon fire would fly over the mountaintop and into Stony
Valley every year. In order to shoe-horn this new firing range into the tiny
FTIG site, the Guard decided it needed to acquire several square miles of
the Valley to serve as a “Surface Danger Zone.” It began negotiations
with the PGC to acquire the land though a “swap.” Again, the Coalition
stepped up to save this wilderness area. While we have made progress in
reducing the scope and size of the swap, the battle is not over.
The
Swap
Sometime in September 2007, an agreement was signed by PGC staff and the head of the PA Department of Military and Veterans affairs. The agreement would give the FTIG absolute control over 900 acres (5%) of the Valley for 90 days a year, including during several hunting seasons. In return, the FTIG “swaps” a small (430 acre) parcel of land with modest value to the PGC. FTIG also “promised” that someday, someone (NOT the FTIG) might buy the Game Commission some additional land, somewhere. In essence, the proposal is for the PGC to swap 900 acres of wilderness for "Echo 1" which is bounded on all sides by FTIG training ranges. Contact the Game Commission with
your objections:
Pennsylvania Game Commission 2001 Elmerton Avenue Phone or email the Governors Office to let him know you do not want to lose Stony Creek – not one foot, not for one day. OUR CONCERNS WITH THE LAND USE AGREEMENT Things you might want to ask the Governor, the Game Commission, or your legislator about Fort Indiantown Gap will be able to exclude everyone from this area for 90 days a year, including most summer weekends. This includes hunters, bird watchers, wildlife photographers, hikers, and anyone else who enjoys the wilderness experience. The exclusion times will include all or portions of most hunting seasons. The only hunting seasons that are fully protected are regular rifle antler and antlerless deer seasons and bear season. Only four weekdays and one Saturday are set aside for each of the Spring and Fall turkey seasons. No other hunting seasons are protected at all. The lands being taken were purchased in part with Federal “Pittman Robertson” (Federal Aid In Wildlife Restoration Act—16 U.S.C. § 669 et seq.)) funds. By law, these lands must be used for the protection of wildlife and kept available for the hunters who paid for them. Restricting access for ¼ of the year, and subjecting wildlife and their habitat to year-round artillery, cannon, and machine gun fire, is a violation of Federal law. Amazingly, under the Agreement, the Game Commission is heavily restricted from evaluating the environmental damage from the hundreds of shells expected to land in the danger zone! The Agreement actually limits environmental assessments to “no more frequently than once per year.” Why does the Gap want so badly to avoid inspections? And why would the Game Commission agree to limit its ability to assess damages on its own lands? The Game Law does not allow the PGC to enter into an agreement of this kind. It may only enter into agreements “for impounding, managing, using, maintaining, and operating lands and waters for game or wildlife management, public hunting and furtaking . . .” (34 Pa.C.S. § 709) Agreements to use state game lands as artillery fire impact zones are not allowed. Why can’t the Game Commission obey the law? The Stony Creek Wild And Scenic River Act is intended to protect this unique wild resource, and the Game Commission is specifically charged with the duty to protect this wilderness. Why can’t it honor its legal obligations?
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Stony
Creek Valley Coalition Last Updated 9/11/08 |
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