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First Congressional District of New Mexico
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ask.heather@mail.house.gov

In Washington DC
442 Cannon House
Office Building
Washington, DC
20515
202-225-6316 Phone
202-225-4975 Fax
In Albuquerque
20 First Plaza NW
Suite 603
Albuquerque, NM
87102
505-346-6781 Phone
505-346-6723 Fax

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Congresswoman Heather Wilson, First Congressional District of New Mexico


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Wilson Welcomes Progress for Ojito Act September 22, 2004
 
House Resources Committee Acts to Preserve Wilderness
Washington, DC – Congresswoman Heather Wilson today welcomed progress for the Ojito Wilderness and Land Transfer Act (H.R. 3176) which passed the House Resources Committee. The bill would establish the Ojito Wilderness Study Area, nearly 11,000 acres, as a permanent wilderness area to be protected under the 1964 Wilderness Act. It also provides for the purchase and transfer of adjacent ancestral lands, now under the Bureau of Land Management, to the Pueblo of Zia. The public would have continued access but the lands would be preserved as open space, and unite two areas of the reservation. “This legislation is locally developed and locally supported,” said Wilson, an original cosponsor of the bill with Rep. Tom Udall. “This is a balanced approach that ensures that public and private needs are addressed, and provides the long-sought transfer of important ancestral lands to the Pueblo.” "The Pueblo appreciates Congresswoman Wilson`s leadership on the Ojito Wilderness Act," said Governor Peter M. Pino, Pueblo of Zia. "She and Congressman Udall have helped us move closer than ever to uniting our reservation land." The Pueblo has worked with the county, the Bureau of Land Management and the state land office in developing legislation with broad support. The effort has the support of Rep. Udall, Sen. Pete Domenici, Sen. Jeff Bingaman, Governor Richardson, State Land Commissioner Pat Lyons, all 20 Pueblos of New Mexico, Bernalillo and Sandoval county commissions, the city of Albuquerque, adjacent landowners and grazing permit holders. Highlights of the Ojito Wilderness
  • Home to diverse animal and plant species
  • Characterized by dramatic land and rock formations, badlands, plateaus and mesas
  • Contains cultural, archeological and paleontological sites
  • Discovery site of one of the largest dinosaur skeletons in 1978 – a 110-foot Seismosaurus, one of the world’s longest dinosaurs
  • Historic sites of petroglyphs and multi-room pueblos of the Zia ancestors
    -END-
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