This is more than just wildlife overpasses. It's a plan for wildlife corridors being used for connectivity and large landscape engineering by non-governmental organizations in partnership with the federal government. A primary target for overpass placement is through transporatation projects. The end goal is control over land use.
Wildlife overpasses are used as a linkage tool for connectivity. From overpasses, migratory corridors can be designated for protection which results in restrictive land use. The goal is connectivity from Yellowstone, through the High Divide in central Idaho to northern Idaho, then into Canada.
There are more Idahoans who oppose overpasses, corridors, and connectivity than there are conservation initiative members. Be part of the Idahoans who want to keep Idahoans in control of their state.
Wildlife overpasses are used as a linkage tool for connectivity. From overpasses, migratory corridors can be designated for protection which results in restrictive land use. The goal is connectivity from Yellowstone, through the High Divide in central Idaho to northern Idaho, then into Canada.
There are more Idahoans who oppose overpasses, corridors, and connectivity than there are conservation initiative members. Be part of the Idahoans who want to keep Idahoans in control of their state.
The Public Has a Voice
The National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) requires public involvement from the beginning of a proposed action. In most cases, the government has been working behind the scenes with NGOs, developing the plans for their large landscape goals, before the public is ever involved. This is a violation of federal law.
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