BigHornyRam
New member
Funny, no mention of who plans to assume payment of the grazing leases. 10 to 1 Bina Robinson is a vegan. So what is going to happen next, after the cattleman are moved of the land. Golf courses, trinket shops, and condos I'm betting Paul
Anti-cattle, pro-bison letters surprise Forest Service
By the Associated Press
ENNIS - A surprise stumbling block has complicated the Forest Service's periodic review of grazing allotments on 37,000 acres of federal land west of Yellowstone National Park.
"We didn't see this one coming at all. It probably set us back a couple of weeks," said Mark Petroni, Madison District ranger of the Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest.
More than 150 letters from across the nation and Canada ask the Forest Service to kick cattle off 12 of the allotments in Antelope Basin so Yellowstone bison can graze there safely. They came from supporters of the Buffalo Field Campaign, whose members have tried to protect the bison from state-sponsored slaughter for several years.
The basin extends from south of Wade and Cliff Lakes south to the Idaho border and is about 35 miles from the park.
"It's some of the most productive grasslands that we have on the entire (730,000-acre) Madison District," Petroni said.
The Forest Service and local ranchers have spent time and money developing an intensive grazing management system in the area, he added.
The buffalo periodically wander out of the park into Montana in search of food. Some carry brucellosis, which causes domestic cattle to abort. A federal-state management plan to protect domestic cattle from infection allows bison to be hazed back into the park or, in some cases, sent to slaughter.
The letters came from as far away as Calgary, California and New York state. They asked for the agency to consider an alternative that would remove domestic livestock from the area in hopes of it becoming summer and winter habitat for bison.
"The long-term public benefit of having a free roaming herd of bison on the Beaverhead National Forest outweighs the short-term benefit of continued livestock grazing, as the Beaverhead would be one of two national forests providing habitat for free-roaming bison," Daniel Brister, project director for the Buffalo Field Campaign, said in one letter.
Another came from Bina Robinson, director for Citizens for Planetary Health in Swain, N.Y.
"After slaughtering this species (bison) to the verge of extinction, we filled up their habitat with cows for the benefit of a small number of cattlemen," Robinson wrote. "It is scandalous that Montana's Department of Livestock is allowed to round up and slaughter any bison that wander out of Yellowstone National Park under the scientifically unsupported premise that they can infect domestic cattle with brucellosis, especially when the cows are not there."
Petroni said about 10 ranching families summer their cattle in the Antelope Basin area.
"The ranchers have just kind of rolled their eyes, kind of like 'What's next?' " Petroni said.
Anti-cattle, pro-bison letters surprise Forest Service
By the Associated Press
ENNIS - A surprise stumbling block has complicated the Forest Service's periodic review of grazing allotments on 37,000 acres of federal land west of Yellowstone National Park.
"We didn't see this one coming at all. It probably set us back a couple of weeks," said Mark Petroni, Madison District ranger of the Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest.
More than 150 letters from across the nation and Canada ask the Forest Service to kick cattle off 12 of the allotments in Antelope Basin so Yellowstone bison can graze there safely. They came from supporters of the Buffalo Field Campaign, whose members have tried to protect the bison from state-sponsored slaughter for several years.
The basin extends from south of Wade and Cliff Lakes south to the Idaho border and is about 35 miles from the park.
"It's some of the most productive grasslands that we have on the entire (730,000-acre) Madison District," Petroni said.
The Forest Service and local ranchers have spent time and money developing an intensive grazing management system in the area, he added.
The buffalo periodically wander out of the park into Montana in search of food. Some carry brucellosis, which causes domestic cattle to abort. A federal-state management plan to protect domestic cattle from infection allows bison to be hazed back into the park or, in some cases, sent to slaughter.
The letters came from as far away as Calgary, California and New York state. They asked for the agency to consider an alternative that would remove domestic livestock from the area in hopes of it becoming summer and winter habitat for bison.
"The long-term public benefit of having a free roaming herd of bison on the Beaverhead National Forest outweighs the short-term benefit of continued livestock grazing, as the Beaverhead would be one of two national forests providing habitat for free-roaming bison," Daniel Brister, project director for the Buffalo Field Campaign, said in one letter.
Another came from Bina Robinson, director for Citizens for Planetary Health in Swain, N.Y.
"After slaughtering this species (bison) to the verge of extinction, we filled up their habitat with cows for the benefit of a small number of cattlemen," Robinson wrote. "It is scandalous that Montana's Department of Livestock is allowed to round up and slaughter any bison that wander out of Yellowstone National Park under the scientifically unsupported premise that they can infect domestic cattle with brucellosis, especially when the cows are not there."
Petroni said about 10 ranching families summer their cattle in the Antelope Basin area.
"The ranchers have just kind of rolled their eyes, kind of like 'What's next?' " Petroni said.