Dougfirtree
Well-known member
Well said. I often think that grazing fees are too low and still do in many instances. I also think ranchers have too much political power, but until western states come up with a solid plan for keeping these large tracts of land intact without ranching, I'd be terrified to tinker too much.Alright. By no means am I versed in Ag economics, but I've been smart enough to shut up and listen to some damned good ranchers & farmers, like @cgasner1.
1.) Other units of cost for landowners are far higher today than they were in the 1980's. Focusing only the AUM price ignores the economics of a ranching operation, cost of land, increases in rates on state trust lands, and private as well. In the past, operators could increase their fee title for a reasonable amount, but as the real estate economics lead towards investment rather than production, this is now far more difficult for an traditional operation to be profitable. Increasing the cost of an AUM may seem like simple math for us, but we're not the ones paying the feed bill in the winter, etc.
2.) The value of public land grazing in western states is far beyond just the benefit for the producer. Those subsidized rates help large blocks of private land stay intact. A study was just released in MT that showed in the last decade 1 million acres of ag land has been converted to housing. Those ostensibly are lands that hosted a lot of wildlife and provided recreation close to urban centers. You can't hunt a subdivision (unless approved under an urban deer mgt plan) and critical winter range is eaten up at alarming rates. Wildlife do not recognize boundaries, and so to think that we can kick producers off of public range while maintaining winter range, migration corridors, calving/fawning grounds ignores how wildlife use the land in favor of a human-centric position.
3.) Overgrazing absolutely is an issue. We tend to focus more on who eats what rather than why isn't there enough. This is the habitat issue, and especially in the west where "the new normal" is still well below the 100 year average for precipitation. Add in the fact that those public ranges are often times not the prime ag lands (otherwise they would have been settled) and a distinct lack of funding (Congress' fault) for habitat restoration and enforcement/compliance, weather events & biological events like grasshoppers and we seem to have an issue where we continue to argue about the smaller pieces of a declining pie rather than how we make the pie bigger and more nutritious.
4.) Elk in the west aren't suffering from a lack of forage. Most states are seeing expansions in the population rather than contractions.
If you want more elk on public land, make public land a place elk want to be. Improve forage, reduce pressure (year round) and enact recreation systems that favor wildlife rather than the human desire to play.
Public land grazing is a massive conservation tool. Like all tools, how it is used matters the most. I have zero problem with $1.35 an AUM because it keeps huge swaths of wildlife habitat intact. The notion that agriculture isn't wildlife friendly is simply untrue. Some practices can be, for sure. Fence-to-fence farming has reduced pheasant hunting across the midwest and monoculture farming significantly reduces the biodiversity of an area. But ungulates love grain, and so do birds. regenerative agriculture is taking off, and if we were smart as a nation, we'd recognize that ranchers & farmers are just small business owners looking to live their lives, while engaging in something worthwhile. If we start from the basic notion that people in agriculture are our neighbors, cousins, uncles, teachers, etc, we can find a better balance, while ensuring that agriculture always has a place on the landscape.
Making this discussion one of conflict ensures nothing good will come about.