WWP Online Messenger #49
January 14, 2003
WWP NEWS
A New Year
Western Watersheds Project extends our wish for a truly rewarding new year to
all readers of the Online Messenger. WWP looks forward to a productive and
successful year restoring the west.
WWP's Greenfire Preserve Welcomes Winter Denizens
WWP's Central Idaho Director, Stew Churchwell, reports that so far this winter
WWP's Greenfire Preserve on the East Fork of the Salmon River has welcomed over
one hundred mule deer, a contingent of elk including some very large bulls, four
feral horses, numerous coyotes, otters, and a bald eagle.
Ranchers To Lose 16,000 Acre Idaho Grazing Lease, WWP
Is Recommended To Be Awarded The Lease
In a surprising turn of events in the first week of January, 2003, WWP has
been informed by the Idaho Department of Lands that the Department will
recommend to the Idaho Land Board that the Lacey Meadows grazing lease on 16,000
acres of Idaho endowment land in Clearwater County, Idaho be cancelled for
failure to comply with the terms and conditions of the lease.
Readers will recall that WWP was the high bidder for this grazing lease
four years ago, but the Idaho Land Board awarded the lease to the low bidder,
the Lacey Meadows Grazing Association.
Since then WWP won an Idaho District Court decision from Judge Deborah Bail
which required the Department of Lands to hold a contested case hearing on the
Lacey Meadows lease and another disputed lease (the 6000 acre Robinson Hole
lease) which were both awarded to the low bidders. Judge Bail also ruled that
until the hearing was held and the issue resolved, the ten year lease provided
to the Lacey Meadows Grazing Association was terminated.
In the meantime, the Idaho Department of Lands had continued a temporary
annual lease to the Grazing Association. The contested case hearing had been
scheduled for January 14-16 but has now been indefinitely postponed with the
agreement of WWP.
The Idaho Land Board will address the issue in February or March. With three
newly elected members, there is no way to prejudge how the Land Board will
respond to the Department's recommendation that WWP receive the Lacey Meadows
lease, but, no doubt there will be considerable political pressure to deny WWP
the lease!
History buffs will appreciate knowing that it is on this very same Lacey
Meadows lease that the hungry Lewis and Clark expedition first encountered the
startled but friendly Nez Perce Indians on the Weippe Prairie in September
1805.
The Idaho Department of Water Resources Takes An Unusual Enforcement Step
In The Pahsimeroi River Watershed
WWP has learned that the Idaho Department of Water Resources (IDWR) has
ordered all irrigation water users in central Idaho's Pahsimeroi Valley to
install headgates and measuring devices on their irrigation diversions before
taking any water this year. The Order may result in some water use being denied
this year if irrigators do not comply with the Order in a timely way.
WWP has been very involved in the issue of water diversions in the upper
Salmon River watershed (which includes the Pahsimeroi River) where listed
chinook salmon, steelhead trout, and bull trout are routinely killed by
unscreened and unmeasured irrigation diversions which often completely dewater
creeks and the Pahsimeroi River itself. One of WWP's successful lawsuits has
stopped the dewatering of Mahogany Creek in the Pahsimeroi Valley.
WWP hopes that this enforcement action is just the start of a more
assertive plan of action by the IDWR to prevent illegal water use in
Idaho.
WWP Files Lawsuit Against the Salmon-Challis National Forest Over
Livestock Grazing Mismanagement
On December 18, 2002, Western Watersheds Project and the Committee For The
High Desert filed a lawsuit in federal district court in Boise, Idaho against
the Salmon-Challis National Forest for violations of the National Environmental
policy Act (NEPA) and the 1995 Recissions Act which ordered a schedule for
environmental review for all Forest Service grazing allotments.
The Salmon-Challis National Forest has failed to meet the Recissions Act
Schedule and is continuing to authorize livestock grazing with little or no
environmental analysis. Numerous grazing allotments on the Forest have allotment
management plans which are thirty to forty years old.
Interested readers can review the Complaint in the WWP litigation pages.
End Of Year Invitation
Consider joining yourself or enrolling a friend with a gift
membership.
Joining is easy at WWP's secure online membership page.