The states of Wyoming, Montana, Colorado, Nevada, Oregon and Washington, comprising roughly 80% of occupied sage grouse habitat, asked the department of interior not do the thing they just did - reopen 98 management plans that were drafted over 10 years with multiple stakeholders who reached a pretty good compromise on how to manage 64 million acres of public land for all uses, and for the first time - put wildlife habitat on the same playing field as industry and grazing.
The Secretary of the Interior has ignored those Governors, and the Western Association of Fish & Wildlife Agencies, and moved forward with a plan supported by Rob Bishop, Big Game Forever, The Heritage Foundation and The Western Energy Association. This move is a slap in the face to the governors, our state wildlife managers and the thousands of people who spent the last 10-12 years working on plans that would have truly benefited public land management.
Also done by Interior is the lapse of a 10 million acre mineral withdrawal of land with low energy development potential in prime sage grouse habitat, further weakening the plans that had been lauded as keeping sage grouse off of the endangered species list two years ago.
The move by Interior sets of a 45 day comment period. The DOI is asking people to send their comments to an email address rather than through he federalregister.gov website. That email is: [email protected]
If folks are interested in submitting comments, I'll happily post up some suggested points to bring up, and some background information, or shoot me a PM if you'd rather go that route.
12 years, hundreds of collaborative meetings, plans that make our public lands actually vibrant and well managed gone. Covfefe!
https://www.dtnpf.com/agriculture/w...7/10/09/sportsmen-see-bad-precedent-protect-2
The Secretary of the Interior has ignored those Governors, and the Western Association of Fish & Wildlife Agencies, and moved forward with a plan supported by Rob Bishop, Big Game Forever, The Heritage Foundation and The Western Energy Association. This move is a slap in the face to the governors, our state wildlife managers and the thousands of people who spent the last 10-12 years working on plans that would have truly benefited public land management.
Also done by Interior is the lapse of a 10 million acre mineral withdrawal of land with low energy development potential in prime sage grouse habitat, further weakening the plans that had been lauded as keeping sage grouse off of the endangered species list two years ago.
The move by Interior sets of a 45 day comment period. The DOI is asking people to send their comments to an email address rather than through he federalregister.gov website. That email is: [email protected]
If folks are interested in submitting comments, I'll happily post up some suggested points to bring up, and some background information, or shoot me a PM if you'd rather go that route.
12 years, hundreds of collaborative meetings, plans that make our public lands actually vibrant and well managed gone. Covfefe!
https://www.dtnpf.com/agriculture/w...7/10/09/sportsmen-see-bad-precedent-protect-2
"We're roughly two years into having sage-grouse not listed under the Endangered Species Act. This is a good thing for the bird and energy development," Mead said. "As BLM looks to make changes to its federal plans, I would encourage the agency to find ways to better align with Wyoming's state plan.
"Folks representing energy, agriculture, recreation and conservation all came together to help frame the state's plan to ensure a strong habitat for sage grouse in Wyoming. There are positive changes that can be made to the federal plans, but we should be careful and thoughtful about how we do that. Wyoming will be engaged in this process and will continue to work with the BLM," said Mead.
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