PICKERINGTON, Ohio -- The Omnibus Public Land Management Act of 2009 -- which would
prohibit motorized vehicle access by off-highway motorcycles and all-terrain vehicles
to more than 2 million acres of public lands -- has been revived in the Senate,
the American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) reports.
Although the original bill, S. 22, was defeated on March 11 in the U.S. House of
Representatives following Senate approval, it has been revived as part of H.R.
146, the Revolutionary War and War of 1812 Battlefield Acquisition Grant Program.
"Despite last week's defeat of S. 22 in the House, the Senate is employing rare
tactics to shove this ban through Congress," said Ed Moreland, the AMA's vice president
for government relations. "The AMA is once again urging all motorcyclists to contact
their Senators to vote against this bill, which is an unfair and overly restrictive
change to public lands policy. The measure unreasonably bans motorized recreation
on 2.1 million acres of public lands by inappropriately designating it as Wilderness.
Continued responsible access to public lands is a vitally important right for current
and future generations."
The Senate leadership is employing a little used parliamentary procedure in response
to the House vote on S. 22. Senate leaders have reintroduced the bill as a 1,300-page
amendment to an unrelated piece of legislation for a vote as early as Monday.
"This demonstrates how serious Senate leaders are about getting this unreasonable
restriction to public land access approved into law," Moreland said. "We must be
just as vigilant in our response. Time is short. All motorcyclists and ATV riders
need to call their senators now and insist they vote no on H.R. 146."
The Rights section of www.AmericanMotorcyclist.com
provides tools for looking up phone numbers for all U.S. Senators. The Issues &
Legislation page also provides additional communication options, including e-mail. However,
with such short time ahead of a likely vote, a phone call is the most effective
approach.
Immediate action is urgently needed to keep the affected 2.1 million acres of public
lands open to motorized recreation.