Celebrating Women in the California Desert

Conservation Lands Foundation • March 8, 2021

QT Luong is a strong supporter of our mission to protect and expand America’s National Conservation Lands system, including National Monuments. Hear more about his experiences on the land and capturing its beauty in our Community Conversation


4. For the Busy Parent

Busy parents have a lot on their plates this time of year. You can make the season a tad bit easier on them by gifting high-quality winter accessories from Patagonia for their kids. Every parent knows you can never have enough of those lying around.

Through Patagonia’s Worn Wear program, you can gift an item of clothing knowing that even when the kids outgrow the item, it can be passed down through the generations. Patagonia has been a longtime supporter of the Conservation Lands Foundation, and they recently announced that 100% of their proceeds will go right back to fighting climate change. 


5. For the World Traveler

From daypacks to duffel bags and everything in between, you can’t go wrong with gifting an Osprey pack for the person in your life who is always jet setting away to their next adventure. This awesome company is a big supporter of Conservation Lands Foundation, especially in our work to empower and strengthen our Friends Grassroots Network.

The best part? Osprey will repair any damage or defect for any reason free of charge-whether it was purchased in 1974 or yesterday. Order by December 16 to ensure your gift makes it in time!

It’s Women’s History Month AND International Women’s Day! We’re celebrating four women we admire every day, who work to protect public lands in the California Desert. Together, they lead advocacy and stewardship efforts across the Los Angeles Basin, Coachella Valley, Mojave Desert, and Eastern Sierra.


We asked Jazmin Ibarra (Program Assistant with the Council of Mexican Federations in North America), Susy Boyd (Public Policy Coordinator with Mojave Desert Land Trust), Jora Fogg (Policy Director with Friends of the Inyo), and Jennifer Prado (Director of Education and Land Programs with Friends of the Desert Mountains) why protecting Desert public lands is important to them - especially now.

Thank you, Jazmin, Susy, Jora, and Jennifer, for all that you do!


What inspires you to steward, protect, and advocate for California Desert public lands?


Jazmin: I feel especially connected to public lands in the California Desert because I’ve lived in the Coachella Valley for over 20 years, and I’m constantly surrounded with beautiful views. These public lands are incredibly important to Indigenous communities, who have lived here for many, many generations. Some of the Desert’s unique plants and animals aren't found anywhere else on Earth. Their magnificent attributes and the beauty they bring to the place I live inspire me to protect these places.

Jazmin exploring the San Jacinto Mountains near Los Angeles.

Susy: Like no other ecosystem, the California Desert elicits a sense of freedom and adventure and expansiveness. It deceptively looks like there’s nothing out here, then surprises you at every turn with glittering rocks, vibrant birds, Native American petroglyphs, the peculiar Joshua tree, abandoned mines, and brilliant sunsets. It’s a landscape that’s in the midst of ascendance from a devalued barren space to making National Geographic’s list of 100 of the world’s most beautiful places.


Jora: I learn something new about the Desert every day, from its incredible biodiversity to the countless reasons it’s worth saving and taking care of. I am inspired by the joy and awe people experience when they get to see a piece of the Desert for the first time. Whether it’s taking friends or elected officials to a special spot, people change their mind or are surprised by what the Desert has to offer.

Jora (pictured left) and a friend visiting Conglomerate Mesa (near Death Valley National Park) in 2018

Jennifer: I’m inspired by the beauty and diversity of life in the California Desert. I’m constantly amazed by how much biodiversity is here. Life here has adapted and evolved to survive and thrive in incredible ways, and I want to be a part of that story. When I am out protecting these lands, I know that I belong.

Jennifer removes invasive Saharan mustard from the sand dunes of the Coachella Valley National Wildlife Refuge.

Right now, what's even more important about the work you do?


Jazmin: At COFEM, we help Latinx families create connections with California Desert public lands by providing transportation and making these places more accessible to visit. We can inform families, in their language, about why our public lands are so important to the Coachella Valley. Many of them, like myself, have lived here for many years after migrating from other counties. In my junior year of high school, I visited Joshua Tree National Park for the first time, which got me interested in conservation work. I learned that there are careers focused on this! So when we are able to take families to hiking or camping trips in the Desert, I love that we’re creating opportunities for kids to grow up and become advocates for these places too.



Susy: This is an interesting time to be working to protect our California Desert public lands because we’re at a crossroads between the public taking an intense interest in these places, while at the same time the region is facing threats from climate change impacts like invasive grasses and wildfire, and development. As a staff member with Mojave Desert Land Trust, our organization’s work puts us in an advantageous position to address these threats. We acquire environmentally valuable private lands from willing sellers and convey them to federal agencies for durable conservation, and use best management practices on lands we own. It’s an essentially simple strategy, but it’s incredibly effective for protecting our Desert lands.


Susy and her dad on a trip to Joshua Tree National Park.

Jora: There is so much of the Desert that still needs to be conserved. The momentum from the Biden Administration's and the state of California’s “30x30” goals (targets to protect at least 30% of our nation’s lands and waters by 2030) has presented new opportunities to bring together different public users such as ranchers, hunters, and tribal nations to address the climate and extinction crisis together with a unified voice.


Jennifer: Right now, it’s important to ensure that communities and people who have been disconnected from the natural environment are able to feel the deep sense of belonging in the outdoors. That is every human’s right. Working to increase equity and justice in my organization and in my field is something I must do; the health of our planet and our very survival demands it.

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If land use plans may now be invalid, then thousands of oil and gas leases and drilling permits issued under them may also be invalid Congress Was Warned About CRA Consequences When Republican members of Congress voted in October to use the CRA to overturn three RMPs in Alaska, Montana, and North Dakota, they ignored urgent warnings from conservationists, legal scholars, former BLM officials, and even some energy industry voices about the chaos this would unleash. The agency's own Solicitor’s Office cautioned that treating RMPs as “rules” could call into question the validity of every BLM plan since 1996 — along with the leases, grazing permits, rights-of-way, and other decisions based on those plans. Thirty leading law professors warned that this move could jeopardize “thousands of leases and management decisions across hundreds of millions of acres.” Former BLM leaders said overturning land-use plans under the CRA would “undermine the basis for authorizations” and create widespread legal uncertainty for energy developers, ranchers, and recreation permittees, threatening the integrity of the entire planning system. But Congress ignored these warnings — and is now moving ahead with even more CRA resolutions that will escalate the crisis. "By incorrectly treating land use plans as rules under the Congressional Review Act, Congress hasn't just overturned three plans — they've thrown every plan finalized since 1996, representing 166 million acres, into doubt. That mistake replaces a stable, science-based, community-driven system with needless chaos and uncertainty. It was lazy and irresponsible and is harmful to all land users," said Jocelyn Torres, chief conservation officer at the Conservation Lands Foundation. Along with the at least 5,033 existing leases, the legal uncertainty extends to future leasing. According to the letter, 69.8% of all BLM lands available for oil and gas leasing are managed under RMPs finalized after 1996 that were never submitted to Congress. BLM is currently evaluating 850 parcels totaling 787,927 acres across 14 upcoming lease sales on lands that may lack a valid RMP. This legal chaos affects far more than oil and gas. Land management plans for national forests, national parks, and national wildlife refuges finalized since 1996 may also be invalid, potentially calling into question grazing permits, timber sales, recreation authorizations, and wildfire management projects across hundreds of millions of acres nationwide. 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