Monday, December 30, 2019

Monroe Mountain Scofflaws

Perhaps you've noticed? Used to be you'd hear coyotes nearly everywhere. But they're growing increasingly scarce. Ranchers, running livestock on public lands, have convinced the federal agencies to utilize rodenticides to rid the land of mice and other small animals that eat seeds and plants. They claim the "pests" eat the forage meant for the livestock. As the rodents die off, so do the coyotes, raptors and reptiles. Basically, the ecosystem collapses.

Charged with managing our public lands, the BLM sometimes encounters folks who think the land ISN'T public. They, the "rightful owners," use their idea to justify the abuse of it. Below is an article from the 29, November, 2019 issue of The Deseret News (Salt Lake City).




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SALT LAKE CITY — A lawsuit against the U.S. Forest Service alleges renegade cattle ranchers are intimidating the federal agency to allow illegal grazing on Monroe Mountain with threats of violence, arrests of federal employees, and calling in a militia called the “Oath Keepers.”
The complaint in U.S. District Court for Utah was filed in late November by the conservation organization Western Watersheds Project, asking the court to rescind grazing allotments against a trio of ranching groups the group says is causing environmental damage on Monroe Mountain in Fishlake National Forest.
The mountain is in Sevier and Piute counties and includes sensitive habitat for the imperiled greater sage grouse, critical aquatic species, and groves of Aspen clones that are suffering from excessive and illegal grazing, according to the 57-page complaint.
Specifically, the lawsuit targets the temporary grazing permits issued for the Kingston, Forshea and Manning Creek allotments.
“To placate a handful of bad actors, the (Forest Service) has bent and broken its own laws and regulations and continues to authorize livestock grazing without any reasonable expectation of permit compliance,” the suit states.
It goes on to emphasize that the “specter of violence is not a valid excuse for the (Forest Service) to abdicate its role as trustee of National Forest Service lands on behalf of all Americans.”
Ranchers have repeatedly violated the terms of their grazing permits for years and called the federal agency’s regulations “silly rules” that don’t require adherence, the suit says.
In 2015, the agency received a tip that one of ranchers was “calling in the militia” known as the Oath Keepers, which was involved in conflicts involving Cliven Bundy’s notorious fight with federal agencies over grazing in Nevada, the suit states.
Bundy’s defiance of the federal government for two decades over his cattle led to a 2014 standoff with armed federal agencies and stoked an outcry of support among some anti-federal government sympathizers angry at regulations they assert are choking livestock ranchers out of business.
Bundy contended the federal lands in Nevada are not owned by the U.S. government, but by the state.
This lawsuit claims these Utah ranchers, like Bundy, don’t recognize the authority of the federal government and have snubbed grazing requirements for years.
One rancher, it says, told the U.S. Forest Service he had the backing of the local sheriff’s office and, at one point in this protracted dispute, a threatened arrest of the local ranger supervisor influenced grazing permit decisions.
The suit also contends that state agencies have been kowtowing to the renegade ranchers for fear of a Bundy-style confrontation at Monroe Mountain.
Western Watersheds Project has repeatedly sought detailed explanations and justification from the U.S. Forest Service over renewal of these temporary permits, but the agency has not sufficiently detailed the basis for issuing permits in the face of yearslong noncompliance, the lawsuit asserts.
“When the Forest Service tried to do the right thing and suspend these livestock grazing permits for multiple willful violations of the terms and conditions, the ranchers responded with threats of violence,” said John Persell, staff attorney with Western Watersheds Project. “That’s an ugly ultimatum, and it’s unfortunate that the Forest Service has to deal with these folks. But it’s unfair to the Americans who own these public lands to let them be continually degraded by scofflaws.”
According to its website, Western Watersheds Project targets what it says is the harmful effects of livestock grazing on public lands in the West.
The Forest Service could not be reached for comment.
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© 2019 Deseret News Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

5 comments:

  1. Plus, the current administration believes public lands are best used as sources for private wealth.

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    1. Fortunately, our court system provides a small measure of check & balance.

      It's also heartening to discover how many of the attorneys, paralegals and others involved work pro bono. Western Watersheds Project, Advocates for the West, Forest Guardians and many other organizations couldn't possibly afford to pay the innumerable people it takes to compile evidence, file briefs, let alone initiate and follow-through with a lawsuit.

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  2. Unfortunately, the court system is moving in the direction of the administration. Forage “meant for the livestock.” Yeah, right. I remember when conservatives conserved, compared to present exploitation.

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    1. What's interesting is the range management laws aren't all that bad, but it's amazing how few abide by them. WWP, Advocates, Forest Guardians and a number of others often win in the courts, but the ranchers just laugh. There isn't any power to enforce the laws.

      I try and avoid politics, but I heard a statistic the other day (I'm STILL trying to find the source) that there are over 10,000 "boomers" taking to the road each month.

      As the largest cohort ever, I like to imagine (naive fool that I am) they'd be receptive to knowing why there are so few birds, no fish in most of the rivers, and to know how lucky they are if they EVER see a beaver, otter, muskrat, badger, falcon, hawk or even a freakin' squirrel (in the wilds) let alone any of the myriad butterflies and reptiles that USED to be out there.

      I'm glad I got here (on the planet) when I did. But it's discouraging to see the extent of deterioration in just my lifetime.

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  3. The statistic appears to have originated with AARP and is that 10,000 reach age 65 every day...not that they take to the road.
    https://arc.aarpinternational.org/countries/united-states

    Here's a more in-depth article from the Pew Research Center:
    https://www.pewsocialtrends.org/2010/12/20/baby-boomers-approach-65-glumly/

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