香港六合彩挂牌资料 monument on California-Oregon border will remain intact after surviving legal challenge

FILE - Pilot Rock rises into the clouds in the Cascade-Siskiyou 香港六合彩挂牌资料 Monument near Lincoln, Ore., July 6, 2000. The Cascade-Siskiyou 香港六合彩挂牌资料 Monument, a remote expanse of wilderness along the California-Oregon border, will not lose any of its acreage after the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday, March 25, 2024, declined to take up two challenges to its expansion. (AP Photo/Jeff Barnard, File)

ASHLAND, Oregon (AP) 鈥 The Cascade-Siskiyou 香港六合彩挂牌资料 Monument, a remote expanse of wilderness along the California-Oregon border, will not lose any of its acreage after the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to take up two challenges to its expansion.

Logging interests and several counties in Oregon had asked the high court to strike down a 2017 addition to the monument. Their lawsuit claimed President Barack Obama improperly made the designation because Congress had previously set aside the land for timber harvests, the reported. By gaining monument status, the area won special protections, including a prohibition on logging.

The challenges to the expansion raised the additional, and broader, question of whether the president鈥檚 authority to create national monuments unilaterally under the Antiquities Act should be restricted, the Chronicle said. Critics of the 1906 law, who have commonly opposed bids for new designations, have argued it gives too much power to the executive branch. The Supreme Court decided not to address the issue.

鈥淭he monument and its expansion, it鈥檚 now the law of the land," said Kristen Boyles, an attorney for Earthjustice, which represented groups supporting the expansion of the Cascade-Siskiyou 香港六合彩挂牌资料 Monument.

The Cascade-Siskiyou 香港六合彩挂牌资料 Monument was created in 2000 to protect what is considered an ecologically valuable juncture of the ancient Siskiyou Mountains and the younger volcanic Cascades. The area, because of its diversity, contains a unique mix of plants and wildlife, from cactus to old-growth fir forests and desert snakes to salamanders. The monument was expanded by about 48,000 acres (19,400 hectares) seven years ago.

The now 114,000-acre (46,100-hectare) monument, while remote and less visited than other federal lands, is popular for fishing, hunting, hiking, skiing and snowmobiling.

While most of the monument is in Oregon, about 5,000 acres (2,000 hectares) reside in California, adjacent to the state鈥檚 Horseshoe Ranch Wildlife Area.

The petitions against the monument鈥檚 expansion were filed by the American Forest Resource Council, a trade group representing logging companies, alongside a coalition of Oregon counties and the Murphy Company, a timber supplier.

The Chronicle reported that they argued that the Antiquities Act couldn鈥檛 trump federal regulation to preserve timber harvests on Oregon and California Railroad Revested Lands, known as O&C Lands. The federal lands were originally devoted to building a railroad between San Francisco and Portland but were later conveyed back to the government with conditions.

At stake for logging companies with the monument designation was millions of board feet of timber that could be harvested there. The counties on O&C Lands stood to lose a cut of the revenue from timber sales.

鈥淲e鈥檙e disappointed the Supreme Court did not take this historic opportunity to provide balance to growing executive overreach on federal lands through the Antiquities Act, and legal clarity for our forests, communities and the people who steward them,鈥 said Travis Joseph, president of the American Forest Resource Council, in a statement.

The challenges were previously denied in two separate appellate court rulings.

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