WWP Online Messenger #70
December 02, 2003
To Our Readers
With this Online Messenger WWP has relocated this email newslist to the email list hosting service of ONE/Northwest in Seattle.
This change will overcome a spam blocking problem at WWP's internet service provider- Cox Internet- which has prevented WWP from sending out the newslist for about three weeks.
Recipients of WWP's Online Messenger can now unsubscribe through WWP or at the this URL at ONE/Northwest:
http://lists.onenw.org/lists/admin/wwpmessenger.
Western Watersheds Project
Appeals Forest Service
Grazing Decision on the Sawtooth National Recreation Area
In March, the Forest Service released a draft environmental impact statement that proposed a nearly 50 percent reduction of livestock grazing on the Upper and Lower East Fork Cattle grazing allotments on the eastern slope of the White Cloud Mountains.
However, the Forest Service's final decision, issued Sept. 30 by Sawtooth National Recreation Area Ranger Debora Cooper shortly before her departure for Alaska, will allow livestock grazing to resume at higher levels than those of the past three years once certain resource conditions are met.
The decision also clears the way for 15 miles of fencing at the 9000-foot level, at a cost to taxpayers of at least $150,000, in order to keep cattle out of sensitive high elevation areas. "As anyone can tell from reading the record of decision, a lot of political pressure has been brought to bear on Area Ranger Deb Cooper, and it has resulted in this unfortunate decision," said Jon Marvel, executive director of WWP.
About 23,500 acres specified for permanent closure in the draft environmental impact statement would only be temporarily closed.
The conservation groups also contend that the decision fails to assess the issue of "substantial impairment" of wolves by livestock on eight other allotments within the SNRA.
In April Federal District Court Judge B. Lynn Winmill renewed an injunction that fully protects wolves on public and private lands in the SNRA even if predations of livestock by wolves occur in the area.
Winmill ruled that the Forest Service violated the Organic Act that created the SNRA by failing to consider whether livestock grazing is substantially impairing wolf populations. He added that the Organic Act does not include grazing as a "historic" or "pastoral" value.
Despite the presence of wolves in the area, some 4,470 sheep and 2,500 cattle are allowed to graze on 28 Forest Service allotments in the SNRA.
WWP and the Boulder-White Clouds Council also maintain that the Forest Service's decision fails to give priority under the Organic Act to the remnant Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep on the Lower East Fork Allotment.
The White Cloud Bighorn Sheep herd may have as few as 37 individual members, a figure that reflects an 80 percent decline in population in the past 10 years, according to the Idaho Department of Fish and Game.
Marvel noted that the majority of the public's input on the draft environmental study was essentially ignored. Of 219 written comments, 130 supported the termination of livestock grazing through a four year phase-out, and 65 recommended curtailed grazing. Only 17 supported ranching.
The appeal will be reviewed by Intermountain Region Forester Jack Troyer.
If Troyer upholds the decision, WWP and the Boulder-White Clouds Council
anticipate further litigation.
25,000 Letters Sent Out to Public Lands Ranchers
Please Contact Your Congressional Representatives And Support These Bills
Readers wishing to read and download the actual letter to all federal grazing permittees or download a copy of either of the Federal bills may do so at the NPLGC web site: http://www.publiclandsranching.org/
WWP strongly recommends that readers of the WWP Online Messenger contact their Representatives in Congress and urge their support for this legislation which has received widespread backing from individual ranchers (especially in Arizona) but strong opposition from national agricultural groups like the Farm Bureau and the National Cattlemen's Beef Association and some recidivist Congressmen like Reps. Flake and Renzi of Arizona and Rep. McInnis of Colorado who prefer to maintain the closed market of the status quo.
Here is a recommendation for taking personal action:
Only Congress can create a voluntary grazing permit buyout program. Please contact your Congressional representative and two United States senators and request they support the "voluntary retirement of federal grazing permits" for ecological, economic, fiscal, social and political reasons. If you don't know who your federal elected officials are or how to contact them, you can visit these web sites:
* http://www.house.gov/ and enter your zip code or
* http://www.senate.gov/
and enter your state where indicated.
RangeNet A Success In Boulder, Colorado
Next Year RangeNet 2004 will be held in either Santa Fe or Albuquerque shortly after the defeat of George W. Bush ! The 2004 conference will be co-sponsored by Forest Guardians (http://www.fguardians.org/) and The Great Old Broads For Wilderness (http://www.greatoldbroads.org/). Both organizations are on the NPLGC steering committee with WWP.
Larry Walker Honored
WWP Executive Director Jon Marvel presented Larry with a framed award and a beautiful print of a blue wolf by Ketchum, Idaho artist Will Caldwell to honor his hard work.
Readers who might care to congratulate Larry can reach him at this email address: lwalker@rangebiome.org.
Dr. Bruce L. Welch Joins The WWP Advisory Board
Dr. Welch and Mr. Criddle's research paper questions many of the basic assumptions about sagebrush which have been the basis for inappropriate management decisions by the Forest Service and the BLM for decades. WWP strongly recommends this paper to all readers.
WWP Settles its Lawsuit
Against the Idaho Land Board
For The Sam Noble Springs State Grazing Lease
The settlement recognizes that the Land Board and Idaho Department of Lands has now agreed to lease the main frog habitat on the lease (about 130 acres) to the Idaho Department of Fish and Game which will exclude livestock from that area. Disagreements over provision of water for livestock from the spring complex has been settled in a way that should continue to protect the frogs lacustrine habitat which has been severely degraded by cattle impacts.
Many thanks are due to WWP's Biodiversity Director Katie Fite, and WWP
attorney Laird Lucas for work on this issue; and a special thanks goes to WWP
Board member Gene Bray who has devoted years to preserving this important
center of biodiversity in southwest Idaho. Thank you Gene!
WWP Gets A Favorable
Recommendation
From A Hearings Officer In The 16,000 acre
Lacey Meadows Idaho State Grazing Lease
The Hearings Officer in this contested case hearing recently completed his recommendation to the Idaho Department of Lands with a very favorable nod to WWP's proposal to acquire the lease. A final recommendation from the Department of Lands to the Idaho Land Board is expected any day.
WWP hopes to acquire this lease for wildlife habitat and riparian restoration purposes without livestock use before the bicentennial of the Lewis and Clark meeting in September 2005, in order to better celebrate this historic moment in a landscape closer to what the explorers first saw two hundred years ago!