JoseCuervo
New member
Once again, the Republican Dominated State Land Board ignores the Constitution, and harms our State's Children, Deer, Elk, Salmon, and Taxpayers. Luckily for ALL Idahoans, Jon Marvel is winning EVERY lawsuit he files.
Group sues state over grazing lease
The Associated Press
BOISE -- An environmental group is claiming a state agency violated the law when it wrongly gave a grazing permit to a cattlemen's association.
Hailey-based Western Watersheds Project accuses the state in a lawsuit filed Friday of improperly awarding a grazing lease to the Lacey Meadows Grazing Association for a historic range that straddles the Lewis and Clark expedition's route to the Pacific Ocean.
Western Watersheds claims it should have been awarded the lease because it outbid Lacey Grazing $8,000 to $7,500 at an Aug. 22, 2000, lease auction. The Land Board awarded the 7-year lease on 16,300 acres to the cattlemen that December.
Western Watersheds appealed the decision, and a district court judge ruled in 2002 that the Land Board violated state law.
Judge Deborah Bail said Western Watersheds would improve the streams, increase the forage and reduce the impact of cattle on the state's young tree plantations there.
The law requires that in addition to the bidding amount, the Land Board must consider the management plans of the competing bidders and weigh which would provide the best maximum return on the land for its long-term earning power.
Bail ordered the case to be reviewed by the Land Board staff, which last month advised its board to continue the current lease with Lacey Meadows.
Rancher Paul Schroeder, who represents the association, did not return phone calls left Thursday by The Associated Press.
Western Watersheds Project, environmentalist Jon Marvel's group, has clashed with the state board in seven lawsuits as he seeks to buy up grazing leases so they can be taken out of production and left idle.
The group has won all the lawsuits, said Western Watersheds attorney Laird Lucas. The victories include four in the Idaho Supreme Court and three in state district courts.
Lacey Meadows is close to the spot where the Corps of Discovery first met the Nez Perce Tribe. The American Indians fed the explorers, gave them directions to the Pacific Ocean and cared for their horses in their absence.