Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 92 Part 1.djvu/96

This page needs to be proofread.

PUBLIC LAW 95-000—MMMM. DD, 1978

92 STAT. 42 16 USC 1132. Review. Report to President. Recommendation, submittal to Congress.

43 USC 616. 43 USC 600f.

Manzano Mountain Wilderness, N. Mex. Sandia Mountain Wilderness, N. Mex.

ehama River eanyon Wilderness, N. Mex. Lone Peak Wilderness, Utah.

Savage Run Wilderness, Wyo.

PUBLIC LAW 95-237—FEB. 24, 1978 sand acres, shall, in accordance with the provisions of subsection 3(d) of the Wilderness Act, be reviewed by the Secretary as to its suitability or nonsuitability for preservation as wilderness. The Secretary shall complete his review and report his findings to the President and the President shall submit to the United States Senate and the House of Representatives his recommendation with respect to the designation of the Spruce Creek area as wilderness not later than two years from the date of enactment of this Act. Subject to valid existing rights, the wilderness study area designated by this subsection shall, until Congress determines otherwise, be administered by the Secretary so as to maintain presently existing wilderness character and potential for inclusion m the National Wilderness Preservation System. No right, or claim of right, to the diversion and use of the waters of Hunter Creek, the Fryingpan or Roaring Fork Rivers, or any tributaries of said creeks or rivers, by the Fryingpan-Arkansas Project, Public Law 87-690, Eighty-seventh Congress, and the reauthorization thereof by Public Law 93-493, Ninety-third Congress, under the laws of the State of Colorado, shall be prejudiced, expanded, diminished, altered, or affected by this Act. Nothing in this Act shall be construed to expand, abate, impair, impede, or interfere with the construction, maintenance, or repair of said FryingpanArkansas Project facilities, nor the operation thereof, pursuant to the Operating Principles, House Document Numbered 130, Eighty-seventh Congress, and pursuant to the water laws of the State of Colorado; (f) certain lands in the Cibola National Forest, New Mexico, which comprise about thirty-seven thousand acreSj are generally depicted on a map entitled "Manzano Mountain Wilderness Area—Proposed", and shall be known as the Manzano Mountain Wilderness; (g) certain lands in Cibola National Forest, New Mexico, which comprise about thirty thousand nine hundred and thirty acres, are generally depicted on a map entitled "Sandia Mountain Wilderness Area (North and South Units)—Proposed", and shall be known as the Sandia Mountain Wilderness; (h) certain lands in the Santa Fe and Carson National Forests, New Mexico, which comprise approximately fifty thousand three hundred acres, are generally depicted on a map entitled "Chama iRiver Canyon Wilderness Area—Proposed", and shall be known as the Chama River Canyon Wilderness; (i) certain lands in Wasatch and Unita National Forests, Utah, which comprise about twenty-nine thousand five hundred and sixty-seven acres, are generally depicted on a map entitled "Lone Peak Wilderness Area—Proposed", and shall be known as the Lone Peak Wilderness: Provided, That the Forest Service is directed to utilize whatever sanitary facilities are necessary (including but not limited to vault toilets, which may require service by helicopter) to insure the continued health and safety of the communities serviced by the Lone Peak watershed; furthermore, nothing in this Act shall be construed to limit motorized access and road maintenance by local municipalities for those minimum maintenance activities necessary to guarantee the continued viability of whatsoever watershed facilities currently exist, or which may be necessary in the future to prevent the degradation of the water supply in the Lone Peak area; (j) certain lands in the Medicine Bow National Forest, Wyoming, which comprise about fourteen thousand nine hundred and