D4570
Well-known member
I Hope it works
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I Hope it works
D4570 brings up a good point...let's say a population is established in the CMR. Do the tribes get to establish traditional hunting rights?
I'm curious to what happens to the existing grazing leases on the CMR? Adding bison with removing cattle would be an ecological disaster and I know there isn't enough grass out there. I'd wager some allotments can bare feed the cows that are on them now (some lease AUMs haven't been changed since the 60s and we know cows and calves have gotten bigger since then...some by as much as 30%)
FWIW I'm on the proverbial fence with this subject as I want bison...I want to hunt bison...but I also have friends with grazing leases on both sides of the CMR that would lose and they're already being approached by out-of-state interest for recreational properties.
Blackfeet treaty of 1874?Tribal rights are set by treaty. To my knowledge, there are no treaty rights that would extend to the CMR or a state-sponsored bison herd. The Ystone treaties allow for harvest, so tribes either take their animals through hunting, or through the test & slaughter route that happens when bison leave the park & are found to be Brucellosis positive.
The grazing aspect is one of the stickier wickets to work out. Totally agree.
This comes to mind. https://images.app.goo.gl/rLXrLBgXk3yrq2FY6lol at 24 hour patrols by the CMR on the prairie dog towns. They've got like 2 paid LEO's that cover a nearly 1 million acre refuge.
Sorry act of congress, possibly not a treaty. I remember it coming up with the recent 2016 water rights bill introduced by Tester.Show me. Not familiar w/it.
Looks like it grants "parties of this treaty, may hunt on the trail leading down the Muscle Shell (sic) to the Yellow Stone"...there's more...Show me. Not familiar w/it.