As part of the initiation of WWP's new office in
Pinedale, Wyoming, WWP has sent notification to the BLM
in Wyoming that WWP and ALA will sue the BLM unless
changes are made to the Settlement with Frank Robbins
which will comply with federal law.
LOOK AT the Notice Letter sent to the Wyoming BLM
This document is
in
MS Word format.
Thanks to Advocates For The West Attorney Laurie Rule
for her hard work on this case!
Here is today's (7/8/03) news article from the Casper
Star-Tribune.
Thermopolis Rancher's BLM Deal Threatened
By BRODIE FARQUHAR Star-Tribune staff writer
A unique settlement between a Thermopolis-area rancher
and the Bureau of
Land Management (BLM) has prompted a conservation group
to file a "notice of intent to sue" the BLM and void the
controversial deal.
The threatened lawsuit is on behalf of Western
Watersheds Project, an Idaho-based group concerned about
management of grazing on federal lands, as well as
American Lands Alliance of Washington, D.C. Both groups
are members of the National Public Lands Grazing
Campaign, which seeks federal legislation for a
voluntary federal grazing permit buyout program to
compensate
ranchers and restore public lands.
The document alleges that the settlement between rancher
Harvey Frank Robbins and the BLM violates the Federal
Land Policy and Management Act, Taylor Grazing Act,
Endangered Species Act and the Code of Federal
Regulations.
"Our notice has several purposes," said Jon Marvel,
director of Western Watersheds Project. One is that
Marvel wants the BLM to comply with federal law.
"Secondly, we want to draw public attention to the
political interference
in this case," Marvel said. Political interference
always causes damage to federal lands, he said. "This is
a perfect example," he said.
Marvel said this threatened lawsuit and his group's
imminent opening of a
Wyoming office in Pinedale constitutes "a much more
substantial effort in Wyoming to bring BLM and Forest
Service management of grazing lands into compliance with
federal law."
Notice of the intent to sue was faxed to the Cheyenne
and Worland offices
of the BLM on Monday by Lauren Rule, staff attorney for
Advocates for the West - a Boise-based, nonprofit,
conservation law firm. She said the Robbins settlement
was unprecedented, brokered by top officials of the Bush
administration's
Department of the Interior.
Rule said the lawsuit would be filed against BLM's top
officials in Wyoming and Washington, D.C., but would not
be aimed at Robbins -- only his settlement with the BLM
and the BLM officials who authorized the settlement.
Advocates for the West has filed numerous lawsuits
against agencies of the
federal government, Rule said. "This time the field
office (Worland) was doing a pretty good job," she said.
BLM records show that because of Robbins' continuing
violations of his grazing permit restrictions, Worland
officials refused Robbins' request for a grazing permit
on his newly purchased Owl Creek ranch. They also
canceled Robbins' grazing permits on his two other
ranches (later stayed for judicial review) and were
actively contemplating seizure of Robbins' livestock.
Rule said the potential lawsuit could be filed in either
the federal district court of Wyoming or the District of
Columbia. She said formal filing could take place as
early as mid-August. The Endangered Species Act
component of the potential lawsuit needs 60 days advance
notice, she explained. That means the ESA complaint
(that BLM did not consult with the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service over grizzly bears observed on Owl
Creek allotments) could be filed separately or added as
an amendment in 60 days.
Cindy Wertz, spokeswoman for the Wyoming BLM
headquarters in Cheyenne, said the notice of intent has
been received and is being forwarded to the BLM
Solicitor's Office in Lakewood, Colo., a Denver suburb.
"Until our solicitor has reviewed the notice, we can't
comment," she explained.