Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Feds Seriously Weighed Sage Grouse Concerns

The Bureau of Land Management does not have to further justify its plan to cut and burn young juniper trees in an Oregon wilderness area, a federal judge ruled. In 2008 the Oregon Natural Desert Association filed suit against the agency to prevent it from carrying out a plan to eradicate juniper trees from sage-grouse habitat in the Steen Mountain BLM Cooperative Management and Protection Area in southeastern Oregon. The environmental group says that the BLM's plan will actually harm rather than help the sage-grouse, which the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) named as a candidate for endangered species listing. In a finding last year , the FWS said listing the sage grouse as endangered under the Endangered Species Act was "warranted but precluded" by higher-priority listing actions. U.S. District Court Judge Garr King disagreed that the listing decision relied on or provided new information that the BLM needed to consider before starting the juniper-eradication project because he said the agency had considered the sage grouse a "sensitive status" species while developing the plan. Quoting 9th Circuit precedent in Swanson v. U.S. Forest Service, King said the "FWS's listing determination changes only the 'legal status of the [species], but it did not change the biological status,'" which the BLM considered in its original Environmental Impact Statement...more

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