Gunnison Outdoor Resources Protection Act
Michael developed the GORP Act over a decade of grassroots engagement with local governments, public lands users, and Tribes. It has bipartisan support from six Colorado counties, several local municipalities, and the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe. A wide variety of public lands user groups, including summer and winter motorized recreation, conservation, mountain bikers, whitewater recreation, ranchers, water users, rock climbers, and hunters and anglers also support the bill.
Backcountry skiing in the proposed North Poverty Gulch Special Management Area. Photo Credit: Patrick Sullivan
Senator Bennet joins Colorado anglers in July 2014 for a visit to fish and review their proposal for public land protection in Gunnison County to protect habitat important for hunters and anglers.
Camping in the proposed Lake Gulch and Cebolla Creek Wildlife Conservation Area. Photo Credit: John Mullens
Senator Bennet met with community stakeholders at Erickson Springs in 2013 to discuss public lands in Gunnison County.
Resources
Map
Frequently Asked Questions
Who supports the bill?
Supporters of the GORP Act include: Ute Mountain Ute Tribe, Gunnison County, Delta County, Hinsdale County, Saguache County*, Pitkin County, Ouray County, Town of Crested Butte, City of Gunnison, Town of Mt. Crested Butte, Town of Paonia, Town of Ridgway, Gunnison County Stockgrowers Association, Crested Butte Mountain Bike Association, Gunnison Trails, High Country Conservation Advocates, Gunnison Valley OHV Alliance of Trail Riders (GOATs), The Wilderness Society, Backcountry Hunters and Anglers, Upper Gunnison River Water Conservancy District, Trout Unlimited, Gunnison Sno-Trackers, Gunnison Sustainable Tourism Outdoor Recreation Committee, American Whitewater, Wilderness Workshop, Western Slope Conservation Center, Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory, The Conservation Alliance, The Access Fund, Colorado Wildlands Project, Western State Ranches, Conservation Lands Foundation, and others.
* Supports applies only to the portion of the bill in their county
Why protect public lands in Gunnison County?
The GORP Act was carefully designed to protect critical community values in the Gunnison Basin, including a strong economy, clean water and air, a wide range of sustainably managed outdoor recreation, healthy, intact ecosystems, robust wildlife populations, including cold-water fisheries, a long legacy of ranching, and opportunities for scientific research.
Why protect public lands now?
Gunnison County, along with Colorado, is growing and changing. Visitation has exploded, and climate change, drought, and development are putting unprecedented stress on our natural resources. The outdoors’ importance for recreation and as a refuge for our local communities has never been greater.
The GORP Act is carefully designed to protect the values that Gunnison Basin residents and Coloradans cherish long into the future. The legislation will help protect existing uses while also ensuring the future vitality of the region’s landscape. While conversations about long-term protection have been ongoing in the region for decades, local stakeholders with wide-ranging interests have coalesced around a common vision in recent years. Now is the moment to ensure that the Gunnison Basin’s incredible natural and cultural heritage is preserved for generations to come.
How was the legislation developed?
After several years of collecting public proposals, the Gunnison County Commissioners assembled local stakeholders to develop a common vision for the future of public lands in Gunnison County. This working group of local stakeholders became known as the Gunnison Public Lands Initiative (GPLI).
Members of GPLI include:
Backcountry Hunters and Anglers, Crested Butte Mountain Bike Association, Gunnison County Sno Trackers, Gunnison O.H.V. Alliance of Trailriders (GOATs), Gunnison Trails, High Country Conservation Advocates, The Wilderness Society, Trout Unlimited, and the Upper Gunnison River Water Conservancy District.
After eighteen months of studying public land management issues in the Gunnison Basin and discussing various options through public meetings, GPLI released a consensus draft proposal for public land management and protection in and around Gunnison County in 2017. After two years of public comment and extensive vetting with on-the-ground stakeholders, GPLI released a revised, consensus proposal in 2019. In 2022, Michael released a discussion draft of the GORP Act based on GPLI’s 2019 proposal. Recognizing the need for feedback from stakeholders and surrounding counties not included in GPLI, Michael held another public comment period. The final legislation includes several changes and provisions based on feedback received during the public comment period.
What were the guiding principles of the GPLI Working Group?
The following principles, collectively agreed upon by the members of GPLI, guided the coalition’s discussions and the creation of their final proposal:
- Appropriate balance between wilderness, recreational, wildlife, ecological, economic, cultural, and scenic values of public lands
- Support for a strong, sustainable economy in Gunnison County
- Respect for historic uses of public lands
- Use of the best available science and all relevant information
- Desire to find workable solutions to all interests
What are the land designations in the GORP Act??
Recognizing the unique and diverse values of public lands in the Gunnison Basin, the GORP Act establishes six different types of public land designations, each designed to carefully fit the values of the lands and community, protect existing uses, and conserve important natural values. All of the special designation areas in the GORP Act would help protect their natural, scenic, scientific, cultural, watershed, recreation, and wildlife resources. However, each also emphasizes some uniquely important values. The types of designations and the values they emphasize are:
Protection Areas: protecting natural and undeveloped character.
Recreation Management Areas: providing for and improving the management of recreation resources for the benefit and enjoyment of present and future generations.
Rocky Mountain Scientific Research and Education Area: encouraging and preserving the conditions necessary for natural science research and education, and providing opportunities for the use of continually emerging techniques and methodologies in the conduct of such research and education.
Special Management Areas: conserving, protecting, and enhancing the natural, scenic, scientific, cultural, watershed, recreation, and wildlife resources of the areas.
Wilderness: preserving and protecting the natural ecosystems and wild areas, and providing opportunities for solitude and retrospective or primitive recreation.
Wildlife Conservation Areas: conserving and restoring wildlife and wildlife habitat.
Who supports the bill?
Supporters of the GORP Act include: Ute Mountain Ute Tribe, Gunnison County, Delta County, Hinsdale County, Saguache County*, Pitkin County, Ouray County, Town of Crested Butte, City of Gunnison, Town of Mt. Crested Butte, Town of Paonia, Town of Ridgway, Gunnison County Stockgrowers Association, Crested Butte Mountain Bike Association, Gunnison Trails, High Country Conservation Advocates, Gunnison Valley OHV Alliance of Trail Riders (GOATs), The Wilderness Society, Backcountry Hunters and Anglers, Upper Gunnison River Water Conservancy District, Trout Unlimited, Gunnison Sno-Trackers, Gunnison Sustainable Tourism Outdoor Recreation Committee, American Whitewater, Wilderness Workshop, Western Slope Conservation Center, Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory, The Conservation Alliance, The Access Fund, Colorado Wildlands Project, Western State Ranches, Conservation Lands Foundation, and others.
* Supports applies only to the portion of the bill in their county
How will the GORP Act affect water rights?
How will the GORP Act affect private property rights?
How will the GORP Act affect livestock grazing?
How will the GORP Act affect summer motorized use?
How will the GORP Act affect mountain biking?
Does the GORP Act allow for trail buffers?
Will the GORP Act affect over-the-snow use?
The GORP Act also modifies the boundary of an existing Wilderness Area to protect the safety of snowmobilers (more below).
Why does the GORP Act change an existing Wilderness boundary?
How will the GORP Act affect quiet uses?
How will the GORP Act affect mining and oil and gas?
How will the GORP Act affect wildfire fighting and hazardous fuels reduction?
How will the GORP Act affect wildlife?
How will the GORP Act affect hunting and fishing?
How will the GORP Act affect emergency access?
Why does the GORP Act release parts of the Powderhorn Wilderness Study Area?
A Wilderness Study Area (WSA) is a Bureau of Land Management (BLM) administrative designation. The BLM must manage WSAs to retain their Wilderness character until Congress makes a final determination on whether they should be included in the National Wilderness Preservation System.
The GORP Act proposes that Congress make such a determination by designating a portion of the Powderhorn WSA as Wilderness and releasing the remaining portions for more flexible management as part of the proposed Powderhorn Wildlife Conservation Area.