Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
Tuesday, June 10, 2014
Three Ways to Reform the Public Lands Grazing Program
1. Raise the grazing fee. It should be abundantly clear that even if Mr. Bundy had paid up, he
wouldn’t be paying enough for the privilege to graze on public lands. At
$1.35 per month per cow/calf pair, this small fee pays for the
livestock “unit” to eat about 1000 pounds of “forage,” also known as
wildflowers, shrubs, grass, and wildlife habitat, drink about 30 gallons
of water each day, and turn both into waste products that foul our
creeks, our campgrounds, and our hiking trails. It’s a bargain for the
rancher, but taxpayers subsidize the program upwards of $1.2 billion
each decade...2. Allow for grazing retirement throughout the West. When Clark County, Nevada sought to mitigate its impacts on desert
tortoise habitat, buying conservation credit on the public lands around
Gold Butte was one way of doing so. Clark County paid for the BLM
grazing permits to be permanently retired, a win-win for the ranchers
whose cows were increasingly in conflict with the native species. Mr.
Bundy wasn’t entitled to avail himself of the payment since he wasn’t a
legal permit holder in 1998, but had he been playing by the rules with
the federal agency, there would have been no reason he couldn’t cash out
on his cows. Voluntary grazing retirement allows ranchers to get out of the
business and the grazed lands a chance to recover and improve as habitat
for imperiled species. Conservation groups and private foundations will
pay the ranchers, but the federal government needs to allow it on all
public lands. This can be accomplished through legislative action, a
simple mandate to allow for permanent retirement of relinquished
permits. There are ranchers itching to go in many places throughout the
west, and the pen-stroke of Congress would solve their woes. 3. End the permit renewal riders The federal agencies can’t keep up with processing grazing permits
with complete environmental reviews and so Congress has been offering
them a free pass to renew without review since 2004. This means thousands of permits are rubberstamped for ten-year terms without having their impacts even evaluated.
Without any checks on the environmental impacts of livestock grazing,
the damage to our natural and cultural resources is done long before the
agencies notice...more
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