Your Comments Needed Now:
WWP Won The Lawsuit in 2004 But The Nevada BLM
Fails Miserably In Its Court Ordered DEIS
PLEASE COMMENT ON A VERY
BAD NEVADA BLM GRAZING DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT
(SEE BACKGROUND INFORMATION ON THIS COURT ORDERED ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT
STATEMENT BELOW)
SEND COMMENTS BY JANUARY 24th, 2006 TO:
Bryan Fuell, Lorrie West
Sensitive Bird Species EIS Project Managers
BLM Elko Field Office
3900 East Idaho Street
Elko, NV 89801-4611
FAX: 775-753-0255
EMAIL: Bryan Fuell:
bryan_fuell@nv.blm.gov and Lorrie West:
lorrie_west@nv.blm.gov (Please
send to both Bryan and Lorrie and ask them for a reply acknowledging your
e-mail has been received)
Unfortunately, and despite BLM’s claims to the contrary, the EIS is not
available to the public on-line. The BLM Nevada Website is still shut down,
and it is not posted on the national site.
Thank you everybody who submitted scoping comments before! BLM received over
100 scoping comments. Please take the time to comment again! If you want,
please e-mail us a copy your comments, too – as Elko BLM has already once
before lost/destroyed public records related to these allotments. If you
provided scoping comments, but did not receive a copy of this EIS, please let
BLM – and us – know.
If you have questions WWP’s contact for Nevada public lands is WWP
Biodiversity Director, Katie Fite: katie@westernwatersheds.org
PLEASE TELL BLM TO:
1. Prepare a Supplemental
EIS.
Cheatgrass, halogeton and invasive species are choking out native plant
habitats essential for sage grouse and migratory birds and the small animals
that provide a prey base for raptors. BLM’s existing livestock facilities and
seedings have destroyed important habitats, caused weed invasions and killed
spring flows. Stocking lands with numbers of cattle and sheep 28-50% above the
numbers that have caused widespread damage to riparian and upland areas is
madness. Pursuing more range facilities and sagebrush killing treatments is
madness. BLM needs to prepare a Supplemental EIS that conducts valid
scientific analysis of habitat conditions and the needs of the sensitive
species. Collect and assess new and complete data on special status species
habitats and ecological conditions.
2. Accurately determine the
current suitability, capability and sustainability of grazing on the
allotments.
BLM must be honest with the public about the condition of the plant
communities, and the severity of habitat degradation and loss that exists. BLM
must develop management to protect and restore damaged special status species
habitats, and act to protect remnant better condition lands.
3. Develop a new range of
alternatives.
that focus on realistic and much-reduced numbers of cattle and sheep, and
reduced livestock “forage” utilization levels based on current scientific
data.
4. Consider all Area of
Critical Environmental Concern (ACEC) Proposals submitted by the public, and
Designate new ACECs.
BLM must act to evaluate and designate large new ACECs to best protect sage
grouse, migratory bird and raptor habitats, plus unique natural communities.
WWP, along with CHD and ONDA submitted proposals for the Owyhee, Goshute, and
other areas, based on TNC Landscape Assessments and other data.
5. Abandon proposals for
even more livestock projects, seedings and sagebrush mowing.
Instead, BLM must remove livestock projects that have destroyed spring flows,
remove pipeline trough systems that are jeopardizing sage grouse and special
status species habitats.
6. Act to restore native
Bighorn Sheep to the Goshute and Toano Ranges.
BLM ignored Nevada Department of Wildlife and public comment on developing
appropriate management so that bighorn sheep populations can be
re-established. BLM must remove domestic sheep that transmit a fatal disease
to native Bighorn Sheep from bighorn-suitable habitats.
7. Consider impacts to ALL
special status and important species and their habitats,
including rare bats; pygmy rabbit; migratory birds like the loggerhead shrike;
mule deer, antelope and sage grouse populations shared between Nevada, Idaho
and Oregon in the Owyhee allotment; and wildlife shared between Nevada and
Utah in the Sheep Allotment Complex. The mountain ranges contain pinyon-juniper,
mountain mahogany, and montane forest habitat for pinyon jay, northern
goshawk, pallid bat, and many other species.
8. Remove cattle from the
damaged East Squaw Creek Watershed in the Big Springs allotment.
This largely perennial stream and spring complexes provide critical sage
grouse brood rearing habitat and a refueling stop for migratory birds in a
very arid landscape. BLM proposes excessive grazing and a harmful series of
spring developments and band-aid fences. These developments will de-water
springs. Plus, they will cause intense cattle grazing and trampling use to be
shifted to any unfenced areas and further dry up flowing stream segments.
9. Stop abusive grazing
practices that are promoting weed invasion, soil erosion and habitat loss in
the Wilderness Study Areas.
BACKGROUND ON THIS SENSITIVE SPECIES AND BIRD EIS
In 2004, the Elko Field office of the BLM was ordered by a Federal Court Judge
to prepare an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) to assess livestock grazing
impacts to sensitive species including sage grouse, golden eagle, burrowing
owl, ferruginous hawk and other raptors across three vast allotments (Sheep
Complex, Big Springs and Owyhee) in the Sagebrush Sea of northern Nevada’s
Elko County. The court order was a result of a lawsuit filed by Western
Watersheds Project and the Committee for the High Desert.
These lands include the Owyhee Allotment in the headwaters of the South Fork
Owyhee River, the Big Springs Allotment comprised of the forested Pequop and
Toano Ranges and surrounding valleys, and the Sheep Allotment Complex
including the Goshute and Toano Range near Wendover.
The EIS BLM produced is a travesty. It relies on the same old, limited and
deficient data and mindset. It ignores the national importance of these lands
and the wildlife that inhabit them. Under ALL new action alternatives in the
EIS, BLM proposes to: Increase cattle and sheep AUMs from 28% to as much as
50% above AUM numbers grazed in the past; perpetuate excessive forage use
levels; construct new wells, pipelines, spring developments; and eradicate
sagebrush with new crested wheatgrass seedings and mowing.
Elko BLM’s EIS effort to date serves as a poster child for the increasing
imperilment of sage grouse. It demonstrates how agency actions are
purposefully imperiling sage grouse, and why sage grouse protection under the
Endangered Species Act is necessary.
The Sheep Allotment Complex includes the world famous Hawkwatch Goshute Raptor
migration site, and portions of the Bluebell and Goshute Wilderness Study
Areas. Nevada Division of Wildlife commented in 2000: “the Allotment Complex
is critically important to the long-term health of ferruginous hawk and golden
eagle nesting populations in the area”.
The Big Springs allotment includes sage grouse lek complexes that are
threatened by habitat loss and the high stocking rates of cattle and damaging
levels of use. BLM proposes to shift increased livestock numbers into critical
sage grouse habitats, and construct new wells, pipelines and seedings. New
fences are proposed that will block mule deer migration routes and fragment
sage grouse habitats. Despite several existing dilapidated spring
“developments” in both this and the Sheep Allotment Complex having killed all
surface expression of springs, BLM proposes extensive new spring developments
in its EIS.
The Owyhee allotment, whose sole permittee, Doby George, is a mining company,
contains still-intact expanses of big sagebrush communities, and 11 known sage
grouse leks and year-round habitat. It is part of the interstate Owyhee
ecosystem shared between Idaho, Nevada and Oregon. Sage grouse, raptors,
migratory birds, antelope and mule deer habitats here are threatened by high
numbers of cattle, excessive use levels, new wells, new pipelines, new fences
and open-ended sagebrush mowing schemes that would carve up and destroy
sagebrush habitats. It includes portions of the Owyhee River Canyon WSA and
the South Fork Owyhee WSA.
Wild horse herds are found in all three allotments in several Herd
Management Areas. Although blamed by BLM for every problem under the sun, wild
horse numbers in these allotments are only a small fraction of the cattle and
sheep numbers grazed here.