Help Rescue 1.5 million
Acres of the Public’s Land
from Being Turned into a Cattle and Weed Wasteland
Jarbidge BLM Resource
Management Plan Needs Your Scoping Comments
Background
In past decades, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) purposefully destroyed
vast areas of wild sagebrush habitats in the 1,4000,000 acre Jarbidge Field
Office of southern Idaho by spraying, plowing and burning to eradicate
sagebrush. BLM then planted exotic crested wheatgrass, shunned by native
wildlife, as cattle forage. This was done to enable high stocking of cattle
primarily owned by a handful of public lands ranchers - including billionaire
J. R. Simplot and the Brackett family, who alone control grazing permits on
nearly HALF the public lands in the Jarbidge F.O.
The Jarbidge Field Office extends from the Snake River in the north into the
scenic high plateau foothills of the Jarbidge Mountains in Nevada, and from
Salmon Falls Creek in the east to the Bruneau River in the west.
The landscape has been undergone massive industrialization for the sole
benefit of the livestock industry. Well over 500 miles of livestock water
pipelines and thousands of miles of fences have been constructed, tearing
apart wildlife habitats. New roads then spring up wherever cattle facilities
are bulldozed into the sagebrush.
The public lands of the Jarbidge have been industrialized for livestock
grazing. As high stocking rates were imposed, cheatgrass and other weeds have
expanded and thrived. The end result is large-scale wildfires, like the
200,000 acre Clover Fire in 2005 that swept through weed-clogged crested
wheatgrass seedings as well as sagebrush communities. It cost taxpayers
hundreds of thousands of dollars in suppression and rehab costs.
Up to the present, most of the Jarbidge BLM lands have not been managed for
“multiple use”, but instead for a single use - for U. S. taxpayer-supported
feeding of privately owned cattle.
Today many areas of the Jarbidge are in shambles, with sagebrush habitats
greatly fragmented and wildlife populations in peril. Sage grouse have
plummeted. pygmy rabbits persist in only a few tiny areas. Mule deer and
antelope face loss of critical habitats and harsh competition with cattle that
are even devouring the sagebrush that big game need to survive the winter.
Native redband trout have been greatly reduced in cattle-trampled streams.
Slickspot peppergrass and other rare plant habitats are being overrun by
cattle-caused weeds.
A victory in WWP litigation in 2005 resulted in the Federal District Court
finding BLM’s violations of laws protecting the public lands and wildlife, and
issued an injunction shutting down grazing. WWP, BLM and ranchers then reached
a Settlement Agreement where grazing continued at reduced rates in native
pastures. As part of the Settlement Agreement, BLM is preparing a new Resource
Management Plan emphasizing SAGE GROUSE HABITAT NEEDS.
ACTION REQUESTED FROM YOU!
Please provide Scoping Comments as follows to turn the tide in these 1,400,000
acres of public lands. Portions of the Field Office, from Browns Bench to the
Diamond A Desert and the scenic canyons, still contain intact sagebrush wild
lands, but are greatly “at risk” of expanded degradation and weed invasion
from livestock. Please include your email and mailing addresses on your
comments to the BLM.
BLM must use best available science to balance uses, and protect all
remaining sagebrush habitats to benefit watersheds, wildlife, recreation and
other important uses of the public lands.
BLM must undertake focused Restoration actions to repair the damage caused
by single-use management for livestock grazing and other disturbance, and
re-connect fragmented habitats. Necessary Actions for Restoration and turning
the tide in the Jarbidge include:
Rest from livestock grazing,
Reductions in cattle numbers,
Retirement of livestock grazing from sensitive or “at risk” lands,
Removal of damaging livestock facilities (fences, pipelines) and
facility-linked roads,
Re-seeding with locally adapted native species in areas of important habitats
now fragmented by crested wheatgrass seedings and weedlands.
These are the
“Five R’s” - in contrast to BLM’s “Four C’s” which unfortunately have always
translated into cows, cows, cows and more cows) for putting public uses back
into management of the public lands of the Jarbidge! They are necessary to
provide sustainable wildlife populations and functioning ecosystems on public
lands.
BLM must establish large livestock-free reference areas, as well as Areas of
Critical Environmental Concern to protect sensitive, unique or “at risk”
lands, and to provide for sustainable sage grouse populations, healthy
watersheds and other important values.
BLM’s plan must prohibit placement of energy projects, utility corridors or
other development in sensitive and important wildlife and wild land habitats.
BLM must take better care of the wild horse Herd Management Area. Remove the
fences that have carved it up into a series of tiny pastures, and reduce
cattle conflicts.
BLM must establish conservative measurable standards of livestock use for
grazed lands that trigger specific actions if standards are not met or other
problems arise, and not rely on open-ended “adaptive management”.
Aimee Betts
Jarbidge Field Office BLM
2536 Kimberly Road
Twin Falls, Idaho 83301
Comments will be accepted after June 15, but the sooner they are received the
better.
A modest amount of BLM posted scoping information about the Jarbidge RMP
process can be found at this URL:
http://www.blm.gov/rmp/id/jarbidge/
Please contact WWP (katie@westernwatersheds.org) if you want to get involved
on-the-ground in the Jarbidge Field Office area. We are making frequent site
visits to collect information and document conditions, are meeting with and
communicating our concerns to BLM, and would welcome your help, expertise or
input!