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Rehberg Schedules Wilderness Listening Tour

Includes five public listening sessions: Ennis, Dillon, Butte, Philipsburg, Deer Lodge

BILLINGS, MT – Montana’s Congressman, Denny Rehberg, will be in Western Montana from January 4-8 to hold public listening sessions on Senator Jon Tester's wilderness proposal being considered in Congress.

“Before Congress decides how this land should be managed, it’s important to give a voice to the folks who work, hunt, fish, hike, camp and enjoy this land,” said Rehberg, a member of the Congressional Western Caucus and the House Appropriations Committee.  “That means public meetings with an open mic where anyone can come and ask questions.”

Rehberg has scheduled five listening sessions, which will be held in counties impacted by the proposed legislation.  All meetings are open to the public for comments and questions.

They are:

Madison County – Ennis
Monday, January 4, 2010 at 10 AM
Madison Valley Rural Fire Station 1
537 US HWY 287

Beaverhead County – Dillon
Tuesday, January 5, 2010 at 12:30 PM
University of Montana Western, Auditorium Main Hall
710 South Atlantic

Butte-Silver Bow County – Butte
Wednesday, January 6, 2010 at 9:30 AM
Montana Tech – SUB Copper Lounge
1300 West Park Street

Granite County – Philipsburg
Thursday, January 7, 2010 at 2:30 PM
Taylor-Knapp Building, Sapphire Gallery, Banquet Room
212 E. Broadway

Powell County – Deer Lodge
Friday, January 8, 2010 at 10 AM
William K. Kohrs Library, Meeting Room
501 Missouri Avenue

In 2009, Rehberg held 36 listening sessions on a broad range of issues from energy policy to health care reform.  At each, he invited the public through press releases, his website and various forms of social media, and then answered their questions and listened to comments from Montanans.

“As Montanans, the land we live on is our most valuable resource,” said Rehberg.  “The question isn’t whether it’s worth protecting, but how we can best do that.  The one-size fits all approach of federal management doesn’t always work, and I want to listen to the folks on the ground before deciding whether I can support any proposal to expand wilderness.”