About Us

Founded in 1989, Wilderness Watch is the leading national organization whose sole focus is the preservation and proper stewardship of lands and rivers included in the National Wilderness Preservation System.

Today, Wilderness Watch includes over 3,000 members and 150,000 supporters. Headquartered in Missoula, Montana, we also have offices in Idaho, Minnesota, Vermont, and Washington, D.C.

Wilderness Watch grew out of the concern that while much emphasis is placed on adding new areas to these systems, the conditions of existing Wilderness areas are largely being ignored. We believe that the stewardship of these remarkable wild places must be assured through independent public oversight, education, and the continual monitoring of federal management activities.

Scientific research reveals evidence of escalating damage throughout the Wilderness System—a trend we cannot allow to continue. Congress established the National Wilderness Preservation System in 1964 “to assure that an increasing population, accompanied by expanding settlement and growing mechanization, does not occupy and modify all areas within the United States…” Unfortunately, simply designating a Wilderness or Wild and Scenic River does not guarantee its protection.

Instead, the long-term preservation of Wilderness depends on the commitment of an informed public to preserve each area’s wilderness character. Wilderness Watch is committed to public oversight, public education and when necessary, legal and legislative action, to protect America’s finest environmental legacy for present and future generations.

Click here to learn more about our staff and board of directors.

A Vision for Wilderness

We have a vision for a world where:

  • Wildness is the defining characteristic of wilderness and there are ample places of wildness and solitude undisturbed by human beings;
  • The ecological integrity and wildness of the National Wilderness Preservation System is equal to or better than it is today;
  • A diverse majority of people believe in the sanctity of wilderness, understand its essential connection to our survival, and strongly support the protection of wild places;
  • Wilderness values are incorporated into institutions and laws that ensure proper stewardship and accountability; 
  • The National Wilderness Preservation System will be overseen by an agency that has wilderness protection as its core mission;
  • The U.S. National Wilderness Preservation System is viewed as a world model for safeguarding wilderness.

Photos: Grizzlies by Sam Parks. Bruneau-Jarbidge Rivers Wilderness, Idaho by Leon Werdinger

Bruneau Jarbidge Wilderness, Idaho by Bob Wick