Western Watersheds Wins
Injunctive Relief Blocking Sheep Grazing on Critical Habitat Streams In
Central Idaho for Listed Chinook Salmon, Bull Trout and Steelhead
Judge Halts Forest Grazing
By Michelle Dunlop
Times-News writer
Ketchum, Idaho
http://www.magicvalley.com/articles/2006/06/16/news_topstory/news_topstory.1.txt
Three days before an area rancher was set to turn 900 sheep onto public lands,
a federal judge put the brakes on grazing a section of the forest.
“There’s not a lot you can do when a judge comes up with a plan to manage the
forest,” said John Faulkner of Faulkner Land and Livestock Co. This week, U.S.
District Court Judge B. Lynn Winmill ended grazing on a portion of the
Sawtooth National Recreation Area for the 2006 season. The judge agreed with
Western Watersheds Project’s concern that grazing will damage the Smiley Creek
allotment that Faulkner’s sheep use. The decision comes after the Hailey-based
environmental group won a court decision against the Forest Service claiming
that the agency violated federal guidelines when preparing an environmental
impact statement on four allotments, including Smiley Creek.
“This is a long overdue and an important victory for fish and wildlife in the
SNRA,” said Jon Marvel, executive director of Western Watersheds Project.
Originally, Western Watersheds sought to end grazing on all four allotments
then narrowed its request to the Smiley Creek and Baker Creek regions, asking
Winmill to stop grazing there permanently. The judge agreed to stop it for one
year, but only for the Smiley Creek allotment.
A spokeswoman for the Forest Service declined comment on the case. The
agency’s attorney did not return phone calls at press time.
Winmill observed that Faulkner, the only livestock producer using Smiley
Creek, will lose money from the ruling.
However, “what tips the balance here is the presence of sensitive species of
fish, and the substantial degradation of fish habitat and riparian conditions
caused by grazing,” Winmill wrote.
Most likely, Faulkner now will send his sheep to Forest Service lands in the
Idaho City Ranger District. But the judge’s decision may force Faulkner to
hire more help and will delay the sheep’s release by at least a week.
“It’s not going to be good for sheep,” Faulkner said.
During the 2006 grazing season, the Forest Service had planned to allow
grazing on nearly all of the 10-mile stretch of Beaver Creek and the 7.5-mile
stretch of Frenchman Creek in the Smiley Creek allotment. The Forest Service
assessed 44 percent of Beaver Creek as functioning at an “unacceptable risk”
and 38 percent of it as “at risk.” Both Frenchman Creek and Beaver Creek
contain Chinook salmon, bull trout and steelhead trout n fish considered
threatened under the Endangered Species Act. The agency noted in its
environmental impact statement that grazing contributed to sediment load in
the stream n one of the problems affecting the threatened fish.
In her declaration to the court, Forest Service Ranger Sara Baldwin had stated
that the agency’s grazing restrictions for Smiley Creek were consistent with
the agency’s plan and would “avoid the resource degradation.” The Forest
Service monitored several sites in the allotment for grazing use and riparian
conditions and found improvements in 2005. Yet, Winmill noted, none of those
monitoring sites were along Beaver Creek and only one was along Frenchman
Creek. The agency did not evaluate water quality issues that impact fish,
Winmill wrote.
“The bottom line is that sheep will be grazing nearly the entire length of two
creeks containing sensitive species of fish and fish habitat adversely
affected by past grazing,” Winmill wrote.
Winmill has ordered the Forest Service to prepare information to supplement
its environmental impact statement before the beginning of the 2007 grazing
season.
Marvel’s Western Watersheds also won a case last year against the U.S. Bureau
of Land Management over livestock grazing on 800,000 near Jarbidge, forcing
the BLM to reduce grazing and redo its environmental assessment of the area.
Saving The Big
Lost River Whitefish
Western Watersheds Project Files Listing Petition With The Department Of
The Interior’s U.S. Fish And Wildlife Service To List The Threatened Big Lost
River Whitefish of Central Idaho
Here is the News Release:
On June 14, 2006 Western Watersheds Project filed a petition with the
Secretary of the Interior, Dirk Kempthorne, to list the Big Lost River
Whitefish as endangered under the Endangered Species Act.
WWP also petitioned for an emergency rule to immediately list the species
because of the high risk to its continued existence.
The Big Lost River Whitefish is native only to the Big Lost River watershed in
central Idaho. In the last century there has been a 78% reduction in its
historic occupied habitat and the numbers of the species have been reduced to
less than 1.5% of its historic populations.
The greatest threats to the continued existence of the Big Lost River
whitefish comes from dewatering of rivers and streams caused by agricultural
diversions, livestock grazing, whirling disease and the introduction of
non-native fish like rainbow trout.