Court ruling halts some grazing on national forests in Southwest
By Summit Voice
SUMMIT COUNTY — When the White River National Forest approved a new travel management plan last summer, the agency completely ignored a biological finding by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on impacts to endangered lynx in the Vail Pass area.
That decision didn’t have any consequences for the Forest Service, but that’s not the case in the Southwest, where a federal judge this week faulted the agency for a similar failure to protect endangered species, as required under federal environmental laws.
Ruling in a lawsuit filed by the Center for Biological Diversity and Western Watersheds Project, A federal judge said the Forest Service violated the law by chronically refusing to monitor the health of threatened and endangered species in national forests throughout Arizona and New Mexico.
The 2010 suit alleged that the Forest Service failed to monitor populations of species, including the Mexican spotted owl and ridge-nosed rattlesnake, as required by a 2005 “biological opinion” authorizing implementation of forest plans for national forests in Arizona and New Mexico.
“The U.S. Forest Service has been shirking its legal obligation to monitor the Southwest’s most imperiled species and make sure its actions aren’t pushing them into extinction. Instead the agency’s been spending its money elsewhere and leaving these vulnerable species in the lurch,” said Taylor McKinnon, of the Center for Biological Diversity. “This court ruling finally holds the Forest Service accountable for neglecting these species and putting them at the very bottom of its list. We hope the Mexican spotted owl and other imperiled species will now get the protection they need and deserve.”
The ruling provides endangered species with interim protection while the Forest Service and Fish and Wildlife Service reinitiate consultation on the regional forest plans. The ruling suspends livestock grazing on four grazing allotments that were determined likely to harm endangered rattlesnakes, imposes restrictions recommended by Fish and Wildlife on logging near Mexican spotted owl nests at the Upper Beaver Creek timber sale in northern Arizona, and may provide a basis for suspending other actions harming endangered species prior to completion of a new biological opinion.
“Arizona’s public lands are deceptively rich in animal life, and it is unfortunate that the Forest Service treats those animals with such disdain,” said Erik Ryberg with the Western Watersheds Project. “Western Watersheds Project is hopeful that this legal victory will cause the Forest Service to acknowledge the damage that their widespread livestock grazing programs inflict on animals that make these public lands their home.”
In June 2005, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service issued a biological opinion that gave the Forest Service, in accordance with the Endangered Species Act, permission to implement forest-management plans in all 11 national forests in Arizona and New Mexico. As a condition of that permission, the Forest Service agreed to monitor threatened and endangered species’ populations and their habitats.
But in October 2008 the Service issued a report admitting it had not done the monitoring. It also admitted that it might have exceeded its allowable quota of harm to some species, including the Mexican spotted owl. The Center warned the Forest Service of an impending lawsuit if it did not begin the required monitoring, which the agency has continued to refuse to do. After the Center filed suit, the Forest Service and Fish and Wildlife Service reinitiated consultation; today’s decision provides interim protections for endangered species until the reinitiated consultation is completed.
The lawsuit was argued by attorneys Marc Fink with the Center for Biological Diversity and Matt Kenna from Durango, Colorado.
To view Tuesday’s ruling, click here.
Filed under: biodiversity, endangered species, Environment, federal government, Summit County news, US Forest Service, wildlife Tagged: | Center for Biological Diversity, endangered species, New Mexico, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, White River National Forest


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This is another blow to an agency that has been taken over by a mind set of negitive values as far as protections go. With all the revelations coming to the surface today, it’s hard not to become a skeptic as to the future. The inepness & corruption in government today is mind boggling.
Boy, does this make me ever wonder about the Peak 6 expansion in Breckenridge, and how it won’t have any negative impact on the lynx population up there, or at least that’s according to our local branch of the Forest Service.
The larger area of habitat is already degraded, so we’re gonna start improving it my chopping up a good area? Orwell lives …
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