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Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Voluntary Grazing Permit Retirement Legislation Introduced in Congress
Bill would Provide Cash Option for Grazing Permittees
Contact: Mark Salvo (503) 757-4221
Additional Contacts:
Mike
Hudak, Sierra Club Grazing Team ● 607/240-5225 Brian
Ertz, Western Watersheds Project ● 208/830-2120 Josh Osher, Buffalo
Field Campaign ● 434/227-1212 Rose
Chilcoat, Great Old Broads for Wilderness ● 970/799-3679
Conservationists hailed the introduction of the Rural
Economic Vitalization Act (H.R. 3432) in Congress today, a bill that would
allow federal grazing permittees to voluntarily relinquish their grazing
permits back to the managing federal agency in exchange for compensation paid
by a third party. The bill was introduced by Representative Adam Smith (D-WA-9th)
and six original cosponsors.
“When enacted, this legislation will help
resolve endless conflict on public lands, while providing ranchers with
opportunities to restructure their operations, start new businesses, or retire
with security,” said Mike Hudak, author of Western
Turf Wars: The Politics of Public Lands Ranching and leader of the Sierra
Club Grazing Team.
Domestic livestock grazing is the most pervasive
and damaging use of federal public lands. On public land across the West,
millions of non-native livestock remove and trample vegetation, damage soil,
spread invasive weeds, despoil water, deprive native wildlife of forage and
shelter, accelerate desertification and even contribute to global warming.
Unfortunately, antiquated federal law generally
prohibits closing grazing allotments to benefit fish, wildlife and watersheds.
The Rural Economic Vitalization Act would authorize federal agencies to
permanently retire grazing permits if requested by ranchers.
“Grazing permit retirement has been implemented
in a few places around the West with marked success, but there is much greater
need—and demand from ranchers—to retire grazing permits,” said Mark Salvo of
WildEarth Guardians.
One landscape that has benefited from grazing permit
retirement is the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem where grazing allotments have
been closed to reduce conflicts with wolves, grizzly bears and bighorn sheep,
and to expand winter range for bison outside Yellowstone National Park.
Yellowstone bison, the last remaining genetically pure wild herd in the U.S.,
are subject to intensive management and control based on the irrational fear
that they will transmit disease to domestic livestock.
“Bison are hazed, captured, shot
and slaughtered to protect grazing interests on public land in Yellowstone
country,” said Josh Osher of the Buffalo Field Campaign. “REVA is the tool we
need to finally, permanently address these conflicts.”
In
addition to being the source of immeasurable environmental harm, the federal grazing
program is a fiscal boondoggle for federal taxpayers. The Government
Accountability Office reported that the Bureau of Land Management and Forest
Service annually spend $132.5 million on grazing management, but collect only
$17.5 million in grazing fees for a net loss to taxpayers of $115 million.
“We
want to save public lands and do our part to solve the deficit,” said Brian
Ertz of Western Watersheds Project. “We just need Congressional approval to buy
out willing ranchers and retire their grazing permits.”
Grazing permit retirement is a voluntary, non-regulatory,
market-based solution to public lands grazing conflicts. Permittees determine if and when they
want to retire their grazing permits. Permittees and third parties separately
agree how much a permittee will be paid for relinquishing their permit. And federal
agencies facilitate the transaction by immediately retiring grazing permits
received from a permittee. The Rural Economic Vitalization Act caps the total
number of grazing permits that may be retired each year at 100.
“This is a win-win-win for ranchers, the environment, and
taxpayers,” said Rose Chilcoat of Great Old Broads for Wilderness. “Let’s pass
this bill so that we can finally take some common sense steps to ensure healthy
public lands.
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