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Federal Document Clearing House
Congressional Testimony
August 8, 2002 Thursday
SECTION: CAPITOL HILL HEARING TESTIMONY
LENGTH: 808 words
COMMITTEE:
SENATE ENVIRONMENT AND PUBLIC WORKS
HEADLINE: WESTERN TRANSPORTATION ISSUES
TESTIMONY-BY: JOHN H. MILTON, III, HUMBOLDT COUNTY,
NEVADA, COMMISSION
BODY: Statement of John H.
Milton, III. Senior Member, Humboldt County, Nevada, Commission
Senate
Environment and Public Works Subcommittee on
Transportation,
Infrastructure, and Nuclear Safety
August 8, 2002
Senator Reid,
members of the Committee, good afternoon. My name is John H. Milton, III and I
am the senior member of the Humboldt County, Nevada, Commission and a member of
the Board of Directors of the Nevada Association of Counties. Thank you for the
opportunity to spend a few minutes discussing "Western
Transportation Issues" and the Federal Lands Highway Program in
particular. As you are aware Senator Reid, over 87% of the land in our state is
managed and controlled by the Federal Government. The majority of this land
accessed over County maintained roads. Most of these roads are gravel which
require a high level of maintenance. In Humboldt County, we have 941 miles of
County maintained roads in our system. Of that amount 669 miles, or 71% of our
system, serve Federal lands. These lands do not generate revenue, which can be
used for the building new roads or the maintaining of existing roads.
In
reviewing the Federal Lands Highway program, I noticed that the majority of this
money goes into the Public Lands Highway category. In that category, 66% goes to
Forest Highways and 33% goes to the discretionary program. In Humboldt County
and the majority of Nevada, the Department of the Interior is the manager of the
Federal Lands and they receive no funding in this program.
In Nevada,
there are approximately 61.7 million acres of federal land of which 51.1 million
acres are administered by the Department of the Interior, primarily BLM. I would
recommend that in the
reauthorization you consider a new
category related to these lands which similar to current categories for Refuge
Roads, and Park Roads and Parkways.
The Sheldon Antelope Refuge is the
only wildlife refuge located in Humboldt County. Access to this refuge is via a
County Road. We believe we should be allowed to access the Refuge Road Category
for improvements to this County Road. We currently receive
$
5,000 a year in revenue sharing from the U. S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, but return $
2,500 to the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service for the maintenance of the Virgin Valley Campground. This does
not leave much for maintenance of the roads leading to or within the refuge.
In April of 2000, I appeared before the Senate Subcommittee on Forest
and Public Land Management to testify on the Black Rock Desert-High Rock Canyon
Emigrant Trails National Conservation Area (NCA). At that time one of the
concerns I expressed was access to the NCA via our county road system. That bill
became law and my concerns have not gone away. Most, if not all, of the major
access points are reached by County Roads. Many of these are Humboldt County
Roads, including the Cedarville Road which provides access to the NCA and the
Sheldon Antelope Range, and the 95-mile road from Winnemucca to Gerlach which
provides access to the entire southern boundary of the NCA. We expect the use of
these roads to increase dramatically; the cost to maintain them will also
increase. Improving these roads to handle increased traffic is beyond our means.
For example, the estimate we obtained to upgrade the road from Winnemucca to
Gerlach to an all weather road exceeds seven million dollars. This does not
include the $
480,000 cost for cultural clearance, right of way
acquisition, gravel pit development, and water sources or the
$
200,000.00 annual cost for maintenance. This road crosses
three Counties, none of which can afford to spend this type of money. Although
roads such as these serve federal lands, Humboldt County maintains them with no
assistance from the federal government.
The access to the
Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest in Humboldt County is also via our County Road
system. We maintain approximately 44.1 additional miles within the Forest under
agreement with the Forest Service. In exchange, the Forest Service maintenance
crew undertakes projects on the County roads leading to the National Forest to
offset our costs incurred by the County for the requested maintenance.
In conclusion, I would ask that you give strong consideration in the
reauthorization of the Transportation Equity Act of the 21st
Century (TEA-21) by addressing the concerns I have expressed today. In
particular I would ask that a category be created to address the vast holdings
of the Department of the Interior. Also that the public roads maintained by
someone other than the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service be allowed to utilize the
money in Refuge Roads category.
Thank you for the opportunity to address
you concerning the Federal Lands Highway Program today and I would be happy to
answer any questions you may have at this time.
LOAD-DATE: August 16, 2002