Dolores River – 2022 Priority Campaign
The Dolores River begins high in the San Juan Mountains of southwestern Colorado and flows 230 miles until it joins the Colorado River in Utah’s red rock desert near Moab.
The Dolores River begins high in the San Juan Mountains of southwestern Colorado and flows 230 miles until it joins the Colorado River in Utah’s red rock desert near Moab.
Header Photo: Alex Falconer Organization will be focused on advocating for permanent protections for the Boundary Waters in MN, Bristol Bay in AK, Castner Range in TX, and the Dolores River in CO The Conservation Alliance (TCA), the leading conservation group organizing businesses to protect land and water, is excited to announce its…
BREAKING NEWS: Along with 24+ of our outdoor industry member companies, we are urging Emerald Expositions (“Emerald”) not to move the Outdoor Retailer trade show to Utah. We’ve joined together in stating that we will not support or attend a trade show event in Utah so long as its elected officials continue attacks on national monuments and public lands protections.
Outdoor Industry Leaders Call on Utah Governor to Drop Monument Litigation Efforts and Support Public Lands
As the industry considers returning its Outdoor Retailer tradeshow to Salt Lake City, leaders point to state elected officials’ continued efforts to undermine public lands protections
The Conservation Alliance and its 270 member businesses in the outdoor recreation, craft brewing and beverage, finance, and clean energy industries, are ecstatic today that the Biden Administration has taken key steps to protect the economy and natural resources in the Boundary Waters area of Minnesota.
The Conservation Alliance and its 270 member businesses in the outdoor recreation, craft brewing and beverage, finance, and clean energy industries, thank the Biden Administration for restoring national monuments in Utah.
Despite having a more friendly administration in the White House, the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is still threatened by oil and gas drilling.
The most profound aspect of Bears Ears is the Native presence that is interwoven into every cliff and corner.
In the years to come, I’m certain we’ll look back on January 2021 for its significance in the campaign to protect the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. It wasn’t always pretty, but at the end of it all… I think recent events have set us up for success in the months to come.
These are precedence-setting campaigns. Protecting the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, the Boundary Waters and Bears Ears means putting Indigenous rights over fossil fuel development, recreation and wildlife habitat over extraction, and intrinsic value over short-term gain.