FEATURE
ARTICLE- Nov.
22, 2004
Conservationist in a Conservative Land
by Ray Ring
A New Dialogue for Idaho’
Environmentalist Rick Johnson and Republican Congressman Mike Simpson are crafting a new language for wilderness protection, but not everyone wants to speak it.
BOISE, Idaho — On a hot October afternoon, in
the nation’s most Republican state, Rick Johnson looks pleased but
a little weary. He’s on his feet behind his wraparound desk, fielding
a burst of phone calls and e-mails commenting on his leadership
of Idaho’s biggest environmental group, the Idaho Conservation League.
The issue of the day is wilderness, the purest goal of the environmental
movement. Six years ago, Johnson hatched a new strategy for wilderness
protection in Idaho. And today it has emerged as a bill in the U.S.
House of Representatives, sponsored by a conservative Idaho Republican.
The calls come from journalists and old friends, many of them congratulatory.
The e-mails tend to come from angry critics within the environmental
movement, who think Johnson is selling them out by making too many
concessions. "It’s very discouraging," one veteran Idaho environmentalist
says later. "There is this chasm (between disagreeing environmentalists)
that was never here before. I fear there will be lingering damage."
There is no denying that this wilderness bill is one of a modern
species, a Frankenstein creature made of stitched-together pieces
that can’t live on their own. To critics, it’s ugly with compromises,
giving too much to ranchers, local governments, dirt-bikers and
snowmobilers.
Johnson sees some ugliness in it, too, but he also sees hope: It
attempts to protect nearly 300,000 acres of icy peaks, lakes, forests
and sagebrush valleys in the Boulder and White Cloud mountain ranges.
Explaining his willingness to compromise to get such results, Johnson
says simply, "I’m a political person."
He’s wearing jeans and a plain short-sleeve shirt, no politician’s
outfit. On the walls around him he has tokens from which he draws
strength, including an Idaho flag, wildlife pictures, and printouts
of quotes from wise men, such as the Greek philosopher, Epictetus:
"It’s not so much what you do, it’s how you do it."
With such thinking, Johnson is leading his group toward the difficult
middle ground. He’s working with Rep. Mike Simpson, a jack Mormon
with a passion for Corvette sports cars and flashy neckties, and
a near-zero rating from the League of Conservation Voters.
The story of how these two leaders came to cooperate on a wilderness
bill provides a window into not only Idaho politics, but also the
wider politics of the environmental movement.
With the whole nation bitterly divided and bound for four more years
of hard-line Republican rule, this seems like an improbable time
to make headway on any progressive environmental or social initiative.
Yet if Johnson and Simpson succeed in staking out middle ground
in ultra-Republican Idaho, perhaps it can be found everywhere.
"I’m trying to create a politics where we get past the default positions,"
Johnson says. "If all I am doing is fighting things, it means more
fighting. If I extend my hand, who’s to say what will happen?"
Some people who don’t care for Idaho politics scornfully refer to
this state as "Planet Idaho." And by the typical yardstick — Democrats
versus Republicans — Idaho does look like a lost planet for one
party.
Republicans have largely dominated here since the 1940s, and since
the early 1990s, their domination has become almost total. In the
wake of the Nov. 2 elections, Republicans will hold fully 80 percent
of the Idaho Legislature, the highest percentage of any state, as
well as the governor’s office and the entire congressional delegation
in Washington, D.C.
With their supermajority, the Republicans in Idaho’s Legislature
have concentrated on protecting business interests. Huge factory
dairies have become the top farm sector here, for instance, and
the Legislature has shielded them from citizen complaints about
pollution and degradation of neighboring property (HCN, 4/15/02).
Meanwhile, the congressional delegation’s senior member, Sen. Larry
Craig, is a champion of the archaic 1872 Mining Law and of salmon-killing
dams that benefit power companies and farmers.
Environmental issues play a role in Idaho’s
distaste for Democrats. The Democratic Clinton administration asserted
federal power during the 1990s, reintroducing wolves, toughening
regulations on grazing and mining, and attempting to preserve millions
of acres of roadless forest by executive action. Clinton became
the bogeyman to many people here, and they reacted by leaning further
to the right.
That tilt made it tougher for environmentalists to designate new
wilderness areas. Idaho had an impressive run of wilderness bills
from 1964 to 1980, protecting 4 million acres. But since then, every
attempt to designate more wilderness has failed, even though the
state has another 9 million roadless acres that could qualify under
the 1964 Wilderness Act. Idaho environmentalists have responded
to each failure by drawing up bigger and bigger wilderness bills,
which have no chance of passing in the current political climate.
Meanwhile, an onslaught of snowmobiles, four-wheelers and dirt
bikes erodes the quality of Idaho’s unprotected backcountry.
Four-wheelers alone have increased more than a hundredfold since
Idaho’s last wilderness bill passed. Led by the Pocatello-based
BlueRibbon Coalition, the backcountry drivers have become some of
the noisiest opponents of wilderness protection.
On the wilderness issue, Idaho looks hopelessly paralyzed. But
Rick Johnson hasn’t accepted that view.
Johnson grew up in Republican upstate New York, earned a bachelor’s
degree in history and political science, and moved west in 1979
to the Sun Valley area, where he drove a forklift in a lumberyard,
then ran his own construction company. He got into hiking, saw firsthand
the impacts of mining, and started environmental work in 1984, first
as a volunteer, then as a staffer for the Idaho Conservation League.
Climbing a rung, Johnson hired on with the Sierra Club in 1987.
Based in Seattle, he spent eight years shuffling between the Northwest
and Washington, D.C., lobbying Congress on national issues such
as the logging of old-growth forest and spotted owl habitat. Johnson
admired Clinton’s effort to compromise and make peace in the
Northwest. Then in 1995, Johnson took the opportunity to return
to Idaho, to run the Idaho Conservation League.
At that time, the Idaho Conservation League was caught in the anti-Clinton
backlash. The group was founded in 1968 to lobby the Legislature,
but had shifted its focus to stopping timber sales to protect roadless
federal lands. That had put the group at odds with much of the state’s
Republican leadership.
Johnson began repositioning the ICL, seeking to improve its credibility,
and to broaden its issues and base of support. He paid more attention
to public relations, making presentations to Rotary clubs, Kiwanis
and chambers of commerce, manning booths at county fairs, and advertising
on public radio. Within a few years, he launched a "community
conservation" program, reaching out to the neighbors of cattle
feedlots and factory dairies, many of whom are Republicans, to help
them deal with water pollution and odor.
"First, we have to have a dialogue with the public —
we have to talk to people who don’t think like us," Johnson
says. "The underlying values of wilderness, and clean air and
water, and habitat, are shared by everybody in this state. But we’ve
allowed the legislative process to become dysfunctional."
Johnson believes that many Idahoans across the political spectrum
are ready to cooperate on environmental issues, because they have
no choice. They face crises they can’t ignore.
With Idaho wrenched by the fifth-fastest population growth in the
nation, Boise and its suburbs suffer increasing air pollution, highway
gridlock, and sprawl. These ills erode the quality of life that
attracts people and businesses here, so cities have begun to seek
state funding for mass transportation, and the authority to impose
local taxes for auto-emission testing. To get that, they need the
cooperation of rural legislators.
In return, rural interests need the urban legislators to act on
Idaho’s worsening water crisis, caused by drought and chronic
overallocation of water rights. They want millions of dollars in
state money to buy out farmers’ water where there’s
no longer enough for all the irrigators, Indian tribes and salmon.
"There’s a recognition that things
are changing," says Brad Little, a rancher, Republican legislator
and former High Country News board member. "Some of us are
hating it, but some of us are accepting it." Statewide polls
conducted by Jim Weatherby, chairman of the Department of Public
Policy and Administration at Boise State University, reveal Idahoans’
underlying values. One recent poll found that more want wolves in
the backcountry than not (about 42 percent to 40 percent), 54 percent
want action on air pollution, and 55 percent support restoration
of salmon runs.
Even more telling is the response to Weatherby’s
question, "What is your political orientation?" Though
those answering "liberal" hardly register, and 42 percent
answer "conservative," another 42 percent say "middle
of the road."
The conservatives and middle-of-the-roaders are "people who
generally take the position that government is wasteful, taxes are
bad, agencies interfere in people’s lives," says Rick
Foster, chairman of the political science department at Idaho State
University. "It’s an isolated, Old West assumption, but
it’s not mean-spirited or wacky. Those people also tend to
be pillars-of-the-community type of folks. They’re not so
ideological, so you can reason with them."
Johnson has tapped into those currents. Taking over an ICL fund-raising
campaign that was sputtering out, he’s built a $1 million
endowment. He raised additional money to buy an old mansion in Boise,
two blocks from the state Capitol, where he installed ICL’s
high-profile headquarters. Under his leadership, the group has grown
from about 2,300 members to 3,200, and from nine staffers to 14;
the annual budget has more than doubled, to about $1 million.
The Idaho Conservation League has reached out to Republican leaders,
most noticeably in Boise, where the group worked on a Republican
mayor’s 2001 initiative to impose a local tax to buy $10 million
of open space in the foothills. The initiative won 59.6 percent
of the vote (HCN, 6/18/01). So far, it’s protected more than
3,000 acres of popular recreation areas within the city’s
viewshed, providing residents with a tangible reminder of the conservation
league’s work. It’s also good for Boise’s economy.
Johnson isn’t soft on all the issues: His group has sued
to reduce pollution from factory dairies and a pulp mill’s
toxic waste, and against logging sales. But he frames the issues
in terms of neighbors’ property rights and the public’s
right to clean water. He circulates press releases that talk about
"improving" timber sales, not stopping them. "We’ve
let ourselves, the conservation movement, be portrayed as the problem,"
he says. "We need to be seen as the problem-solvers."
And, still trying to protect more federal lands as wilderness,
Johnson has reached out to another problem-solver, Congressman Mike
Simpson.
On another day in October, Mike Simpson is taking a break from
Washington, D.C., holed up in his home in small-town Blackfoot,
south of Idaho Falls. It’s a modest beige stucco, a half block
away from a trailer court. Across the street, a neighbor has a pickup
truck up on blocks with its wheels removed.
Simpson is wearing jeans and a checkered shirt. To have a talk,
he puts down a book he’s reading, titled Who owns the West?
by William Kittredge, which describes a region in "a time of
profound transition." His walls display one of his hobbies,
landscape painting. He also likes to quote famous wise men, and
rattles off the words of French novelist Marcel Proust: "The
real voyage of discovery is not in seeing new lands, but in seeing
with new eyes."
Hiker below Castle Peak, highest peak in the White Cloud Peaks.
Glenn Oakley
Simpson is full of surprises. He’s a dentist’s son,
and practiced dentistry himself for 22 years while dabbling in politics
part-time, working his way up to be speaker of the Idaho House of
Representatives. He gave up dentistry to run for Congress in 1998,
because, he says, he finds politics "fascinating."
He represents Idaho’s 2nd Congressional District, which stretches
from the farm country of southeast Idaho to Boise. It includes the
liberal Sun Valley resort area, but overall, it’s one of the
most conservative, Republican, Mormon districts in the nation.
But Simpson is proof that Idaho voters still admire an independent
spirit. They’ve demonstrated that in the past by electing
Democratic statesmen, such as Frank Church, who served 24 years
in the U.S. Senate, ending in 1980, and Cecil Andrus, who served
20 years as governor, ending in 1994.
Not that Simpson doesn’t often take conservative positions:
In Congress, he’s voted for oil drilling in the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge, snowmobile traffic in Yellowstone National Park,
and for suspending environmental regulations where fire-prone forests
need to be thinned.
But Simpson doesn’t cater to the far right. He breaks with
his party on abortion and sometimes tax policy, and he also breaks
his Mormon religion’s taboos with an occasional glass of wine
or a cigarette. He sold his last Corvette to raise money for his
first congressional campaign, and still buys 30 to 40 neckties a
year, explaining, "The only thing that adds color to menswear
is a tie."
When asked if he’s a hunter, in a state defined by hunting,
he says he’s tried it, but doesn’t care for it. "I
don’t shoot animals; they’re too pretty." He has
no problems with hunters going for the meat, but says, "I don’t
agree with trophy hunting."
In person he’s a dynamo, and clearly, he likes to mix it
up. "I like to read things I disagree with, talk to people
I disagree with, like to understand how people come to different
conclusions," he says. "If I agree with you, the conversation
is over." He even sees drawbacks in the state’s Republican
domination: "The system works best when you have two vibrant
parties, and there’s a real contest of ideas."
Simpson got to know the Idaho Conservation League’s lobbyists
when he was in the Legislature, and he respected them enough to
make a small donation to the group. When a journalist asked about
the gift during his first congressional campaign, though, he refused
to admit it. Then, shortly after he became a congressman, he got
an invitation from Rick Johnson: Come up to Redfish Lake in the
summer of 1999 and speak to ICL’s annual Wild Idaho Conference.
It was a crucial encounter. At the conference, Johnson and Simpson
began to get to know each other. And Johnson brought up the idea
of designating wilderness in the nearby Boulder and White Cloud
mountains.
Johnson has the usual environmental reasons for picking the Boulder-White
Clouds: spectacular scenery, prime habitat for mountain sheep and
mountain goats, wolves, elk and salmon. He also has political reasons.
The Boulder-White Clouds have no significant logging industry, traditionally
a tough opponent of wilderness. Lots of Idahoans already know the
mountains’ beauty: Their crowns are visible along the popular
highway through the Sawtooth National Recreation Area. They’re
also close to an ICL pocket of strength in Sun Valley.
At the Wild Idaho conference, Johnson took Simpson on an overflight
of the mountains. It brought back Simpson’s memories of family
camping trips in the area when he was a kid. Simpson agreed to think
about a wilderness proposal. From then on, Johnson courted Simpson,
sending him postcards and letters, visiting him, having dinner together.
"We started listening to each other more and more," Johnson
says. "He began to understand wilderness better, and I began
to understand the needs of rural Idaho better, the needs of his
constituents."
For a wilderness bill to fly, Simpson needed
to satisfy the ranchers who have grazing permits in the Boulder-White
Clouds, the off-road drivers, and the local government leaders who
see wilderness protection as another federal power play. It’s
a challenge Simpson relishes. "My goal is to improve the lives
of people I represent," says Simpson, "and to accomplish
something long-lasting. I want to try to solve problems —
that’s why I’m here, to solve problems."
There are a lot of problems in the area that
need solving. The ranchers are going under, hit by regulations and
lawsuits protecting salmon, competition from cheap imported beef,
and rising costs. Custer County, on the eastern and northern flanks
of the mountains, has watched its mines as well as its ranchers
busting out. It’s hard for the locals to see any economic
alternatives, with about 4,200 people scattered over 4,900 square
miles, almost all of which is federal land. And the off-road drivers
are worried about being shut out; they want to know exactly where
they can — and can’t — go.
Simpson set out to solve all the problems at once, and made it
his own wilderness effort, not Johnson’s, because that was
the only way it could work politically. He ran it as shuttle diplomacy,
meeting with each interest in small groups. He took each side’s
demands to the others, and brought back the reactions, working toward
something that would be acceptable to all. The demands started out
large, but he whittled them down. It took two-and-a-half years.
The Idaho Conservation League took the lead representing the environmentalists,
and made another strategic move by helping to produce an economic
study of Custer County. It showed that the county might reshape
itself with better schools and a new post-high-school education
center, high-speed Internet access, affordable housing, and better
medical facilities. It helped the locals realize what they might
ask for in return for supporting some wilderness protection.
Three months ago, Simpson took his proposal public in a big way,
with a speech to a group of Idaho’s movers and shakers at
the City Club in Boise that was broadcast to a statewide public
radio audience. Vowing to craft an "Idaho solution," he
said, "Everybody has to see some benefit in it, and everybody
has to give up something." He acknowledged both the fun of
dirt-biking and the way the machines disturb the solitude of hikers
in "God’s cathedrals." He said his goal is to "separate
uses that are inevitably conflicting uses ... We don’t have
to put a snow machine or dirt bike on every acre in Idaho, just
because we can."
Simpson had crossed a threshold in modern Idaho politics: A Republican
had come out strongly for wilderness. Then, he went backpacking
in the Boulder-White Clouds, and endured three days of hail, snow,
sleet, and rain. "Nothing prettier than a good lightning and
thunder storm," he says.
The bill that Simpson introduced in the U.S. House in October was
a rough draft still lacking important details. Simpson says he’ll
reintroduce it in the current lame-duck session of Congress, and
the negotiating will continue, more in the open. Predictably, the
competing interests — including the Idaho Conservation League
— say they want the details adjusted in their favor.
"It’s not a bill I would have written," Johnson
says, "but I am not in charge."
The blandly named "Central Idaho Economic Development and
Recreation Act" would hand out millions of dollars of federal
money to local governments and ranchers. It would give several thousand
acres of federal land to the locals for development. And it includes
strange odds and ends, like a promise to build "motorized recreation
parks" near four cities that are hundreds of miles from the
wilderness (see story at right).
The bill would kick motorcycles off some trails, while allowing
riders to continue using many others, including one that splits
the wilderness areas. It would protect much of the best habitat,
the most famous peaks, and the watersheds of key rivers, while leaving
more than 100,000 acres of equally wild land outside of wilderness
boundaries.
Twenty-four environmental groups — 17 of them based out-of-state
— have come out against the bill. They range from the Sierra
Club to Wilderness Watch. They know that protecting wilderness has
often required compromise, but they believe this bill gives away
too much for too little gain.
The bill’s most controversial proposals are two land giveaways
to Custer County: about 150 acres along Valley Creek in tiny Stanley,
near the Salmon River, and 960 acres in the Cape Horn area near
Marsh Creek, off the highway from Stanley to Boise; both are habitat
for elk and spawning salmon. Many residents of Stanley also oppose
developing these parcels. Developing both parcels would violate
the rural character of the Sawtooth National Recreation Area, warns
Jon Marvel, director of Western Watersheds Project, based in Hailey.
The land giveaways are "a bribe, to get the counties to sign
off on the bill," he says. "Not that bribery isn’t
effective — it’s extremely effective. But why bribe
them with something that has inestimable value? Instead, we should
give them something that has very little value: money. Let them
fight and quibble over money."
The critics also want the off-road vehicles forced off more trails,
to reduce the stress on wildlife. "This is a brutal, cold country,
where wildlife really struggles to make it," says John Osborn,
the conservation chair for the Sierra Club’s regional chapter.
He has family roots in Stanley, and has worked in Idaho’s
conservation movement for decades. As traffic continues to increase,
any backcountry left out of the wilderness, he says, will become
"an ORV hell."
Critics worry that the bill reinforces the trend of Frankenstein-style
wilderness, like the designation of Oregon’s Steens Mountain
Wilderness in 2000 (HCN, 11/6/00) and Nevada’s proposed Lincoln
County Conservation, Recreation and Development Act (HCN, 9/13/04:
A water-and-wilderness bill kicks up dust in Nevada). Many of them
also oppose another wilderness collaboration effort, in southwest
Idaho’s Owyhee canyonlands, where the Idaho Conservation League
is working with Republican Sen. Mike Crapo on the Owyhee Initiative
(HCN, 12/8/03: Riding the middle path).
"I like him personally," Jon Marvel says of Rick Johnson.
"But I think he’s become too enmeshed in the legislative
system — it’s a spider’s web."
Strictly on environmental grounds, the critics are probably right,
but the politics can’t be ignored. The land giveaways, for
instance, have more than a dollar value for Custer County —
they help calm the prevailing local belief that the federal government
has too much land.
And the ICL is not entirely alone: The Wilderness Society and Trout
Unlimited also support the Boulder-White Clouds process. "This
is hard stuff," says Craig Gehrke, who’s in his 19th
year with the Idaho branch of The Wilderness Society. "There’s
a lot of information and concepts in this bill, and right now, we’re
saying, the possibility of all the good outweighs the bad. Let’s
keep running this, to make it as good as we can make it."
With the national election results handing George W. Bush the White
House for another four years, and conservative Republicans increasing
their hold on Congress, it seems we’re all living on Planet
Idaho now. Suddenly, the Boulder-White Clouds process has become
widely relevant.
The Bush administration will likely stay its course on environmental
issues. It will continue to weaken regulations, appoint federal
judges who share its philosophy, and develop more oil and gas on
public and private land. And it will likely have support for this
course from the Republicans running Congress.
On the wilderness front, Rep. Richard Pombo, R-Calif., chairs the
key House Resources Committee, and he hardly ever sees a wilderness
bill he likes. Pombo has recently blocked Washington state’s
106,000-acre Wild Sky Wilderness bill, for instance, even though
it has bipartisan support and is riddled with compromises.
Snowmobilers, other backcountry drivers and environmentalists who
don’t think they’ve gotten enough in the Boulder-White
Clouds may try to enlist Pombo or block the bill in Congress some
other way.
Simpson, who won re-election with 71 percent of the vote in his
district, is optimistic. He thinks he can get enough fellow Republicans
and enough Democrats to go along with the bill, because he’s
negotiating enough support from each local interest.
"Most people want to see some resolution," he says. "Most
people don’t want conflict."
Environmentalists everywhere face the same questions as those focused
on the Boulder-White Clouds. They can work for increasingly ugly-looking
solutions, perhaps making some new friends along the way, or at
least defusing some old enemies. Or they can hold out for better
times.
"There is hope" for better times, says Michael Garrity,
director of Alliance for the Wild Rockies, one of many groups seeking
the ultimate wilderness victory in Idaho and neighboring states:
the Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act. It would designate
20.5 million acres of wilderness in Idaho, eastern Oregon and Washington,
western Montana and western Wyoming. Painstakingly, its backers
have recruited 185 co-sponsors in the House — but they’re
still several dozen short of victory. "Obviously, (the Northern
Rockies bill) and any other good alternative isn’t going to
pass while Bush is president," Garrity concedes.
Those who hold out, though, risk losing more ground, as the backcountry
traffic continues to increase, and as the administration and Congress
push more rollbacks of regulations and laws.
Rick Johnson and Mike Simpson remind us that even now, reasonable
people can be found on opposing sides. They also remind us that,
as Simpson says, "Politics is about relationships."
Politics is also — as the late Democratic speaker of the
House, Tip O’Neill put it — fundamentally local. In
Idaho, four more years of Bush won’t create more water. It
won’t thin Boise’s winter smog, which robbed residents
of views of the spectacular aurora borealis — the northern
lights — on several nights this month. It also won’t
solve the conflicts between off-road drivers and those wanting peace
and quiet.
But like people everywhere else, Idahoans will continue to work
on the local problems. And the Idaho Conservation League will likely
continue to gain credibility with people not normally considered
part of the environmental movement.
Johnson is eager to track this progress. He has hired a pollster
— the same one Idaho’s Republicans use. In a poll last
year, Johnson learned that 78 percent of Idahoans were "aware"
of the Idaho Conservation League, and of those, 26 percent had a
favorable opinion; another 34 percent had no opinion. Says Johnson,
"Everything I’m doing should have a positive effect on
that 34 percent." He expects the next poll to show better numbers.
The author is HCN editor in the field.
Rep. Mike Simpson Washington, D.C., office, 202-225-5531
Idaho Conservation League Boise headquarters, 208-345-6933
The Wilderness Society Boise office, 208-343-8153
Sierra Club Boise office, 208-384-1023