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Adirondack Council Defends Wilderness in Court - Intervenes in Jackrabbit Ski Trail/Old Mountain Road Legal Case

For more information:
John F. Sheehan
518-441-1340 cell
518-432-1770 ext. 203

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Wednesday, January 17, 2017

ALBANY, N.Y. -- The Adirondack Council was in court here today to defend Wilderness, urging a panel of state judges to reaffirm the state’s right to close former local roads and turn them into trails on the state-owned Adirondack Forest Preserve.

“We are defending the future of Wilderness preservation in the Adirondack Park,” said Executive Director William C. Janeway of the Adirondack Council, the park’s largest environmental organization.  “If this legal challenge succeeds, hundreds of foot trails and ski paths could be turned into roads and opened to motorized vehicles.  That would be a disaster for the park’s most sensitive forests.  It would damage wetlands and water quality, and chase away wildlife.”

Adirondack wilderness areas comprise almost half of all Wilderness in the Eastern United States. 

While all Adirondack Forest Preserve lands are protected as “forever wild” by the NYS Constitution, less than half are classified as Wilderness, where no mechanized travel or motors are allowed.  The Town of North Elba in Essex County is challenging the state’s right to close the former Old Mountain Road, now a trail through the Sentinel Range Wilderness Area known as the Jackrabbit Ski Trail. 

The case is being heard by the NYS Supreme Court’s Appellate Division in Albany, which heard oral arguments in the case today.

All 1.1 million acres of Adirondack Forest Preserve classified as Wilderness would be put at risk if the town’s legal challenge succeeds, Janeway explained.  The six-million-acre Adirondack Park has 21 wilderness areas and represents about half of all remaining wilderness east of Minnesota.  (Most of the rest is in the Florida Everglades.)

“The stakes are huge in this case,” Janeway said. “That’s why we petitioned to become a party to the lawsuit and why we are in court today to defend decisions made by the state.

“Wilderness is what sets the Adirondack Park apart from other places in the Northeast,” Janeway said.  “It is both the ecological backbone and the economic backbone of the Adirondack Park.  We have what other places only wish they had: large tracts of forest where nature is the dominant force.  People come from all over the world to experience that for the first time.  They keep coming back because it doesn’t exist where they live.”

The case (North Elba vs. NYS Dept. of Environmental Conservation) stems from the state issuing a ticket to James McCulley of Lake Placid for driving his pickup truck on a portion of the Jackrabbit Ski Trail in the Sentinel Range Wilderness Area.  The trail runs through three Essex County towns, all located inside the Adirondack Park. 

In the initial order, the DEC ruled that the trail had not been legally closed by the state.  This ruling raised objections from conservationists and legal experts, who felt it was in error.

A subsequent administrative ruling by DEC reopened the case.  A third decision declared the road to have been closed lawfully.  McCulley said he was unhappy with the road closure and filed an Article 78 lawsuit against the state to reopen the trail to trucks.  The Town of North Elba joined the suit.

The Adirondack Council is a party to the case.  The state’s Adirondack Park Agency had certified that DEC’s classification recommendation for the Sentinel Range Wilderness Area complied with the state’s Adirondack Park State Land Master Plan.  The Council is defending DEC’s authority to close roads in Wilderness areas.

The Jackrabbit Ski Trail was once known as the Old Military Road, then the Old Mountain Road.  It was replaced with the current State Route 73 through Cascade Pass, which links Keene to Lake Placid alongside Upper and Lower Cascade lakes. 

The ski trail is named for H. Smith “Jackrabbit” Johannsen who was instrumental in the development of ski trails in Lake Placid area in the 1920s.

The Adirondack Council was represented in today’s oral arguments by J. Michael Naughton of Young Sommer LLC in Albany.

The Adirondack Council is a privately funded not-for-profit organization whose mission is to ensure the ecological integrity and wild character of the Adirondack Park.  The Council envisions a Park comprised of core wilderness areas, surrounded by farms and working forests, as well as vibrant, local communities. 

The Council carries out its mission through research, education, advocacy and legal action.  Adirondack Council members live in all 50 United States.

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