Tuesday, September 17, 2019

A 30,000-acre Win on Grand Staircase – Escalante National Monument!

In a great win for the Grand Staircase–Escalante National Monument, Western Watersheds Project, the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance (SUWA), The Wilderness Society, and the Grand Canyon Trust managed to get a the U.S. Department of the Interior’s Board of Land Appeals (IBLA) yesterday to block a bad BLM decision to destroy more than 30,000 acres of pinyon-juniper forest and sagebrush from the Skutumpah Terrace area! The proposed project would have rid the area of pinyon pine and juniper trees by "mastication," an intensively surface-disturbing method of vegetation removal that involves shredding trees where they stand by means of a wood chipper/mulcher mounted to a large front-end loader, which is driven cross-country throughout a project area. The plan would also have authorized the destruction of sagebrush by chaining, the practice of ripping shrubs and trees from the ground by dragging large chains between two bulldozers. The Skutumpah Terrace project is featured in a National Geographic story this month. And why would the BLM do such a thing? Cow food. The BLM intended to tear out the habitat of pinyon jays in order to plant non-native grasses for the benefit of livestock. In their own words, the Utah’s Watershed Restoration Initiative behind the project admitted, “We don’t shy away from the fact that this program is in benefit of sustainable agriculture." In overturning the BLM’s decision, the IBLA found that the BLM erred because it “failed to take a hard look at the Project's cumulative impacts on migratory birds under NEPA [National Environmental Policy Act]... [and] erred in determining that using non-native seed… was consistent with the applicable land use plan under FLPMA [Federal Land Policy and Management Act].”...MORE

The IBLA decision is online here.

I've also embedded the decision below:

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