THE WHITE HOUSE 
				 Office of the Vice President  
 
				 
				   
					 |  
						For Immediate Release
						 |  
					 
						May 18, 2000 |  
				  
 
				
 
				VICE PRESIDENT GORE ANNOUNCES NEW LAND PROTECTIONS IN CALIFORNIA
				  DESERT 
 
				 Calls on Congress to Pass Administration's
				  Lands Legacy Initiative
 
				 Washington, DC -- Vice President Al Gore announced
				  today that the Administration and a non-profit conservation organization have
				  secured the money needed to complete a historic acquisition of pristine desert
				  lands in Southern California. The Vice President also called on Congress to
				  support the Administration's Lands Legacy initiative, which includes
				  funding to protect nearby lands from future development.
 
				 Under the funding package announced today, the
				  National Park Service (NPS) and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) will
				  acquire 180,605 acres within and adjacent to federally protected lands between
				  Barstow and Needles. The land will be purchased from the Catellus Development
				  Corporation with $5 million in federal funds secured by the Administration in
				  the fiscal year 2000 budget and a $15 million donation from The Wildlands
				  Conservancy.
 
				 These stunning California Desert lands are
				  being preserved for future generations through a true public-private team
				  effort that could serve as a model in other areas, said Vice President
				  Gore. I commend the Wildlands Conservancy for its hard work and
				  generosity. Protecting magnificent lands through this type of partnership is a
				  central goal of our Lands Legacy initiative.
 
				 The purchase, to be completed within the next
				  month, builds on the California Desert Protection Act signed by President
				  Clinton in 1994. The Act, sponsored by Senator Dianne Feinstein, provided new
				  or enhanced protection for 6.6 million acres, including the new Mojave National
				  Preserve and 69 BLM wilderness areas.
 
				 Under an agreement in principle announced in
				  December 1998, Catellus agreed to transfer to the federal government a total of
				  405,000 acres within and around the lands protected by the 1994 Act. Although
				  the lands were valued at $61.6 million, Catellus agreed to a purchase price of
				  $45 million. The first phase of the acquisition was completed earlier this year
				  with $10 million in federal funds and $15 million from the Wildlands
				  Conservancy. Today's announcement sets the stage for completing the second
				  and final phase of the acquisition.
 
				 The areas to be protected include some of the most
				  pristine and scenic desert lands in the world. Their features include cinder
				  cones and lava flows, spectacular ranges of rock and flowing sand dunes, vast
				  valleys, intriguing cactus gardens and important habitat for the endangered
				  Desert Tortoise. Approximately 83,000 acres will be acquired by the Park
				  Service within the Mojave National Preserve, and the Bureau of Land Management
				  will acquire approximately 97,000 acres, including lands in six designated
				  wilderness areas-- Clipper Mountains, Dead Mountains, Piute Mountains, Bristol
				  Mountains, Old Woman Mountains and the Chemehuevi Mountains wilderness. 
 
				 The Vice President commended Senator Feinstein for
				  her leadership in securing the federal funds; The Wildlands Conservancy for its
				  generous donation; and Catellus for selling the land at a substantially
				  discounted price.
 
				 The Administration's proposed fiscal year
				  2001 budget included $15 million to complete the second phase of the
				  acquisition. In light of The Wildlands Conservancy donation, the Administration
				  yesterday proposed redirecting the proposed fiscal year 2001 funding to acquire
				  other critical California desert lands on a willing-seller basis. 
 
				 Unfortunately, Congress' budget failed to
				  provide funding for the President's Lands Legacy Initiative. As a result,
				  the House Interior Appropriations Subcommittee yesterday could only provide a
				  small portion of needed land acquisition funding, with no funding to acquire
				  critical desert lands. "I am deeply disappointed that Congress is slashing
				  funds that would allow us to forge other partnerships like this one to protect
				  critical lands across America," the Vice President said. "I urge Congress to
				  provide permanent and full funding for Lands Legacy so we can provide states
				  and communities the resources they need to protect their precious green
				  spaces."
 
 Today's acquisition completes the largest purchase of
				  private land in California's history and the largest purchase of land from
				  one seller by the Bureau of Land Management in its 50-year history. Once
				  acquired, the lands would be open to public access for outdoor recreation
				  including hiking, hunting and other permitted uses. 
 
				 Additional details are available on The Wildlands
				  Conservancy website:
				  www.wildlandsconservancy.org