Tule Springs Wash - aka Upper Las Vegas Wash

calamaridog

Expedition Leader
To preface these posts, I just want to say I bought my house as far north in the valley as I could. I figured since the land on the other side of the street was BLM, running into the Desert National Wildlife Range, that I was as far north as I could go. Think again:yikes:

Parkway route cuts 22-mile path
Preservationists, residents lining up to weigh in on corridor
By Joe Schoenmann, Mike Trask
Sun, Apr 27, 2008 (2 a.m.)


A battle now taking shape in the northern reaches of the Las Vegas Valley has been more than 40 years in the making.

Its origins, in fact, can be traced back much further in time — much, much further.

In 1962, paleontologists made a rare find of prehistoric fossils in the Upper Las Vegas Wash, amid the alluvial soils of Sheep Mountain.

At 438 sites along the wash, bones dating back 200,000 years lie openly on the desert surface.

Protected by the Bureau of Land Management, the area is so valuable that it is accessible only to those with a BLM permit. Even accidental wanderers are strictly forbidden from disturbing any of its rarities.

Now there is great concern over the area’s future, concern greater than at any other time in the four decades-plus since the fossils’ discovery.

Because of expected growth, thousands of new homes and residents will soon enough encroach upon what once was home only to desert tortoises and cactuses. To accommodate that growth, a transportation corridor has long been planned.

Until recently, no one knew exactly where that highway would go. Now people have a rough idea of the proposed Sheep Mountain Parkway’s path. And many don’t like it one bit.

Where it would go

Starting near the northwest limit of Interstate 215, just north of Ann Road, the 22-mile highway would shoot north for about five miles, curve gently to the east and pass U.S. Highway 95. Continuing east, it would skirt the southern end of the Desert National Wildlife Range, passing through an area reserved for a future UNLV campus between Lamb Boulevard and Pecos Road, go through Nellis Air Force Base’s Small Arms Range and connect to I-15 just beyond the Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

Because of the transportation corridor, thousands of acres of once-remote lands will come front and center, causing many area residents to worry about how the desert landscape and the wealth of fossils and rare plant life will be preserved.

Public meetings will be held May 9 and 20 to discuss an environmental impact statement being prepared for the stretch of desert the Sheep Mountain Parkway would traverse.

Another meeting is to be held on a yet-undetermined date in July to give the public another chance to give ideas to highway planners about the proposed route, which would intersect the Upper Las Vegas Wash.

The meetings are sponsored by the Nevada Department of Transportation and the Federal Highway Administration in cooperation with Las Vegas, North Las Vegas and the Regional Transportation Commission.

Las Vegas City Councilman Steve Ross, whose ward covers the area, did not return calls to discuss the proposed highway. Neither did Councilman Larry Brown, whose district would include the area if he wins the Clark County Commission seat he is seeking.

North Las Vegas officials said the city does not have a formal opinion on the major route that would cut through the city’s northern tip. That city is following Las Vegas’ lead, said Qiong Lu, public works director.

Study is under way

One question residents and concerned neighbors have: Why does the city need an environmental impact statement, when an extensive study of the area is being conducted for the BLM by Utah State researchers?

Although many in the conservation and preservation communities believe the new report is a waste of taxpayer dollars, Las Vegas spokeswoman Diana Paul said the two studies are different.

The Utah State study, being conducted by the school’s Environment and Society Department, is examining how different preservation alternatives will affect developable land.

For the study, Utah State’s Glen Busch, project manager, said precise counts and locations of fauna were registered in a database through global positioning system devices. By the end of August the school is expected to complete a draft report, which the BLM then will use as part of an overall environmental impact statement.

Residents are eager to see that study. Emotions are running high, because the city and many residents differ greatly over how much of the so-called Conservation Transfer Area should be preserved. The BLM has the ultimate authority in that decision.

City favors development

Of six possible preservation plans, the city prefers the one that preserves the fewest acres — and, by extension, opens the most acreage to potential development.

Preservationists and a growing number of northwest valley residents are at the other end of the spectrum. In contrast to the city’s desire to save only 2,300 acres, they want to preserve the full 13,000 acres.

They visualize those 13,000 acres becoming something like Red Rock Canyon, a recreation area with nature as center stage. Because of the value of the fossil finds and the rarity of some of the desert flora, including buckwheat and bear poppies, they argue the area could be a huge educational resource and tourism draw.

The city argues for the smaller plot because it wants to maintain a corridor for growth into northwest valley, along U.S. Highway 95. The city, already pinched between the Desert National Wildlife Range to the northeast and the Paiute Reservation to the southwest, wants to keep open a big enough space between those two protected areas for roads and infrastructure into the northwest expanse.

Abdelmoez Abdalla, the Federal Highway Administration’s environmental impact manager in Nevada, said nothing will be decided for some time.

“All we’re saying now, we’re going to study this transportation corridor,” Abdalla said. “And whatever we’re going to choose then has to match what the BLM has, too.”


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calamaridog

Expedition Leader
Protectors of Tule Springs Wash - Tule Springs Ice Age Park

So there is an NPO specifically trying to preserve the area. Sounds like I agree with them...

From the Protectors of Tule Springs Wash website:

• The preservation of one of the most “unique” Desert ecosystems in the World
• Protect the integrity of the Upper Las Vegas Wash
• Ice Age Park to include:

1. World Class Scientific Research Institute and Repository
2. Visitor Center
3. Mammoth and other fossil displays
4. Interactive Paleo area for young and old alike.
5. Paleo Library and conference rooms.
6. Paleontologists excavating on site for visitors to watch and study.
7. Escorted tours through paleo and archeological sites.
8. Endangered plant viewing areas and study.
9. Hiking areas through desert ecosystem.
10. Connectivity with Floyd Lamb Park, Tule Springs National Register Site, Shadow Ridge High School National Science Foundation, Gilcrease Paleo Camp and State Lands.

• Both the La Brea Tar Pits and the Hot Springs Mammoth Site in South Dakota are world-class fossil sites that combine cutting edge research with fossil Tourism. We have the potential of developing such a facility in the Tule Springs area of the Las Vegas Valley.


You can read about this NPO here:

http://tulespringslv.com/


You can sign their petition here if you wish:

http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/iceagepark/
 

calamaridog

Expedition Leader
Cbd...

Ah crud, I might be in bed with some strange bedfellows:snorkel:

For Immediate Release, April 21, 2008

Contact: Rob Mrowka, Center for Biological Diversity

Endangered Species Act Protection Sought for the Las Vegas Buckwheat:
Imperiled Clark County Native Plant Threatened by
Development and Off-Road Vehicles

LAS VEGAS— Today the Center for Biological Diversity filed a scientific petition with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to protect the Las Vegas buckwheat under the federal Endangered Species Act due to threats from development and increased off-road vehicle use throughout the plant’s limited range in Clark County. Over 95 percent of the plant’s historic habitat has already been destroyed.

“The Las Vegas buckwheat is a genuine Las Vegas native and deserves a better fate than being paved over by shortsighted development or crushed by a reckless off-road vehicle user,” said Rob Mrowka, a biologist with the Center for Biological Diversity.

The Las Vegas buckwheat is a unique subspecies found only in small areas of Clark and Lincoln Counties. Its habitat of gypsum-rich soils and “badlands” topography has largely been lost to the unchecked, rampant growth in the Las Vegas Valley. Today only about 1,145 acres of habitat remain, of which 286 acres face imminent destruction. Some of the largest concentrations of the plants are found in the Upper Las Vegas Wash ecosystem and on Nellis Air Force Base.

The population in the Upper Las Vegas Wash is threatened by development pressures to sell public lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management to private developers in the City of North Las Vegas. The Nellis Air Force Base population is threatened by the refusal of the Department of Defense to enter into a conservation agreement to protect the roughly 230 acres of plants still remaining on the base. Another 140 acres were recently lost due to flood control and housing developments on the base.

“Federal and state regulatory agencies have been far too willing to gambling away habitat for development, while hoping this plant can somehow survive,” added Mrowka. “Without immediate action, this important native Nevadan will go extinct in our lifetime.”

Other threats to the species and its present reduced state are habitat destruction, degradation, and fragmentation due to unmanaged off-road vehicle use and utility corridors.

Under the Endangered Species Act, the Fish and Wildlife Service must determine whether the petition has merit within 90 days and make a final finding on whether the species should be protected within one year.
 

calamaridog

Expedition Leader
Presently, OHV use is prohibited, but I know people who say they used to ride out there and "nobody ever said anything". BLM has the area closed, and it has been closed for some time, not sure the history on that. They even put up some fencing and more signs in the last year. I see regular patrols too and they have busted some idiots lately who went around or through the fencing. Put a big smile on my face:D
 

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