Defending the Southwest
The Southwest United States is a landscape of enchantment. From the
high mountains, forests, and deserts in the Rio Grande Headwaters of northern
New Mexico and southern Colorado, the landscape follows the Rio Grande south
along the New Mexico Highland Wildlands. In the southern reaches of New Mexico,
along the U.S. – Mexico border, remnant, native Chihuahuan Desert Grasslands
provide one of the last tracts of ecologically unique black grama grassland.
West from the Rio Grande, the landscape rises to the Colorado Plateau centered
on the Four Corner’s states and south of the Plateau, to the biologically rich
Sky Islands of southwest New Mexico and southeast Arizona.
Water defines this
place, giving rise to the common phrase “agua es vida” – “water is life.” So
does the land’s intense history, arcing back thousands of years, and providing a
shared narrative for Native, Hispanic, Anglo, and, indeed, all American peoples.
Although the threats to this landscape’s natural and cultural heritage are
immense, dedicated communities and organizations provide inspiration, hope, and
a voice for conservation.
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Challenge to Bush Administration Foot-Dragging on Species Protection
- The Bush administration has been using a legal loophole in the Endangered Species Act (the “warranted but precluded” clause) to delay listing of hundreds of species which it has acknowledged need protection, effectively allowing these species and their habitat to spiral downhill towards extinction.
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Protecting Water Resources in New Mexico Roadless Areas & Wilderness through Outstanding National Resource Waters Designation
- The Western Environmental Law Center is representing a coalition of conservation groups working to protect water resources in New Mexico’s Roadless Areas and Wilderness by designating their waters as Outstanding National Resource Waters, the highest form of protection under the federal Clean Water Act.
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Protecting Mexican Wolf Populations in the Southwest
- The Western Environmental Law Center is assisting a coalition of groups to protect and enhance Mexican wolf populations in the southwest.
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Reducing Greenhouse Gases in New Mexico
- In the summer of 2006, Governor Bill Richardson issued an executive order establishing greenhouse emission reduction targets for New Mexico. To achieve these targets, the order established the Climate Change Advisory Group (“CCAG”) to make recommendations to reduce greenhouse gas (“GHG”) emissions from the range of sources in New Mexico. WELC has been working with this advisory group to ensure that the public is represented.
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Ensuring the Public's Right to Know - Pesticide Reform
- In a long campaign with Northwest Coalition for Alternatives to Pesticides the Western Environmental Law Center has sought full disclosure of active and inert ingredients in pesticides to the public under the Freedom of Information Act.
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WELC Files Suit to Gain Release of Basic Public Documents Regarding the Proposed Desert Rock Power Plant Withheld by the BIA
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WELC Sues Forest Service Over Attempts to Remove Protections for Wildlife Across the Country
- WELC files suit on behalf of 14 conservation organizations
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WELC Protests BLM's Failure to Consider Climate Change in Offering Oil and Gas Leases in New Mexico
- Sloppy industrial practices make oil and gas drilling the second-largest source of greenhouse gas pollution in New Mexico, but the Bureau of Land management intends to
open up another 100,000 acres of the state to the oil and gas industry without considering the impacts of climate change and without requiring the use of the latest technologies to cut global warming pollution.
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Lynx in New Mexico in Legal Limbo, Groups Sue to Protect the Rare Cats in the Southwest
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VICTORY! WELC Protects Wildlife, Birds and Habitat on Farms
- We are thrilled to report that, in one of the quickest legal resolutions we've seen, WELC won a significant victory protecting habitat for wildlife on farmlands.
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