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Jen Millner's avatar

I just called Zinke’s office and was told by a staffer that if the bill comes back with the public land sale provision he will vote against it again. I asked him why this isn’t on record anywhere, and told me that it is, and referred me to Zinke’s “personal Twitter account.” I’m not on Twitter so asked him to read me the statement, and then I asked him why he’s not made that statement anywhere officially, like his own website, to the press, or in Congress. Of course he couldn’t answer that, so I gently encouraged him to tell Zinke to make a formal public statement so we can all hold him accountable.

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Marty's avatar

We live in the Salmon-Challis National Forest here in ID, and our property is surrounded by green/USFS land, including the Big Creek Hot Springs which some of you in MT maybe have come to enjoy that’s 3 miles up the road from us, it’s an undeveloped hot springs.

This has nothing, not one iota having anything to do with “housing”, it’s a land grab pure and simple for OAG exploration, geothermal exploration (like the Big Creek Hot Springs here we fought years ago that was only “stayed”), mineral(s) exploration, mining and as you say Ryan locking up but to the weathest public land for private hunting and fishing.

This provision in the BigBeautifulB.S. Bill can not pass. Heck, most of what’s in the #BBbsbillPlease can not pass, it will devastate the economy, and permanently our way of life as we’ve known it.

Everyone, please call your local radio station, newspaper, state reps and Congressional reps, write LTEs, let your neighbors know about this 300M acre permanent land grab.

No one is aware that in the 2017 Tax Bill, that it did away with homeowners and businesses from writing off recovery costs from hurricanes, tornadoes, wildfires, floods, and natural disasters. We lived through the 2022 Moose Fire here in the Salmon-Challis National Forest, and then the 8/5/24 cloud burst that flooded our area of the forest, with mud and rock slides. We were with our pelton-wheel generated power for 9 months and I hauled water from the Hot Springs creek and Panther Creek for 2 mos (while he was fighting wildfires - a retired AK Smokejumper still working seasonally) to flush the toiet and boil to wash dishes. We’ve spent $10K so far to get the Pelton wheel running, and keep it running, not including the cost to run 12-16 hrs a day a whole house generator (recommended for short term emergencies but not long term).

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