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WHAT'S NEW AT THE REFUGE

A Farewell to Building 111

The building that once served as the Army Administration offices during World War II was demolished in early July.

End Of An Era: Demolition Of Bldg 111.

Read more about this event in the Commerce City Beacon
or
Learn more about the Cleanup at the U. S. Army RMA Website

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Establishes
Rocky Flats National Wildlife Refuge

July 12, 2007

Rocky Flats National Wildlife RefugeThe U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service today announced the establishment of the Rocky Flats National Wildlife Refuge. Nearly 4,000 acres of the former defense site, located 16 miles northwest of Denver, Colorado at the intersection of Boulder, Broomfield and Jefferson Counties, was transferred by the U.S. Department of Energy to the Service following an extensive process to clean up contamination from nuclear weapons production at the site.

Rocky Flats will be administered by the Service as a unit of the National Wildlife Refuge System, the nation's premier network of lands and waters managed for the conservation of fish, wildlife, plants and their habitats. Created in 1903 by President Theodore Roosevelt, the refuge system has since grown to include nearly 100 million acres from Alaska to the Caribbean Sea. Rocky Flats is the 548th unit of the system, and is part of the Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge Complex, which includes the Arsenal, located in Commerce City, Colorado and Two Ponds National Wildlife Refuge, locat7/15/08yle29">"With the transfer of nearly 4,000 acres from the Department of Energy, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will establish the Rocky Flats National Wildlife Refuge in order to conserve the rare and unique tallgrass prairie found along Colorado's Front Range. As intended by Congress, the refuge will preserve a lasting wildlife and habitat legacy for future generations," said Service Director H. Dale Hall.

Mitch King, the Service's Mountain-Prairie Regional Director, added: "The establishment of the Rocky Flats National Wildlife Refuge enhances the already outstanding wildlife-dependent recreation opportunities in this region. The Service is proud to partner with other federal agencies, the State of Colorado, local governments and others to provide yet another natural asset for the public to enjoy."

The Rocky Flats National Wildlife Refuge Act of 2001, which was sponsored by Senator Wayne Allard and Representative Mark Udall, designated the future use of the site as a national wildlife refuge. Physical completion of the Rocky Flats cleanup was achieved by Department of Energy in late 2005, and regulatory closure of the cleanup was achieved in September 2006. Earlier this year, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, with concurrence from state and local public health agencies, removed Rocky Flats from the national list of "Superfund" sites, thus certifying the cleanup as complete and paving the way for the transfer of the site from DOE to the Service and the establishment of the refuge.

In 2005, the Service completed a comprehensive conservation plan and associated environmental impact statement for the refuge that creates a management framework for the next 15 years. The plan, which was developed over a three-year period that included extensive public involvement opportunities, emphasizes wildlife and habitat conservation with a moderate amount of wildlife-dependent public use. Pursuant to the plan, public use will increase gradually over the 15-year life of the plan, as resources become available.

Refuge-wide habitat conservation will include management of xeric tallgrass and native plant communities, as well as weed control, removal and revegetation of unused roads and stream crossings, management of deer and elk populations and black-tailed prairie dog colonies, and protection of habitat for the Preble's meadow jumping mouse, a species listed as threatened under the federal Endangered Species Act.

Visitor use facilities will eventually include approximately 16 miles of trails, a seasonally-staffed visitor contact station, trailheads with parking, and developed overlooks. Most of the trails will use existing roads, and public access will be by foot, bicycle, horse or car. Pursuant to the refuge conservation plan, the Service will develop a limited public hunting program.

The Service will publish official notice of the refuge establishment in the Federal Register within the next 30 days.

Contacts: Steve Berendzen, (303) 289-0350
Dean Rundle, (303) 236-4306

Last Updated: 7/15/08


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