Houston Chronicle

Land-deal ban may hurt stressed grouse

- By Dan Elliott

DENVER — Some governors in the West say a new Trump administra­tion directive threatens to undermine a hard-won compromise aimed at saving a beleaguere­d bird scattered across their region.

The directive, issued in late July, severely limits a type of land swap involving federal property. Critics say that eliminates an important technique for saving habitat for the shrinking population of greater sage grouse.

“It took one of our tools out of the toolbox,” said John Swartout, an adviser to Colorado Gov. John Hickenloop­er.

Hickenloop­er told federal officials in an Aug. 2 letter that he opposes the change. Nevada, Oregon and Utah also expressed opposition or concern.

A spokeswoma­n for the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, which issued the directive, said the agency would work with the governors on “adjusted” plans.

Greater sage grouse are spikytaile­d, ground-dwelling birds about the size of chickens. They are best known for the males' showy displays in mating dances.

They once numbered in the millions, but the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service now estimates the population at 200,000 to 500,000. Experts blame energy developmen­t that broke up the habitat, along with disease, livestock grazing and other causes.

Their range covers about 270,000 square miles in parts of 11 western U.S. states and two Canadian provinces. The largest concentrat­ions are in Wyoming, Montana, Nevada and Idaho.

In 2010, the Obama administra­tion said the bird would need protection under the Endangered Species Act, which would have brought restrictio­ns on drilling, mining, ranching and other developmen­t.

But in 2015, the administra­tion reversed course, announcing an intricate agreement called the Sage Grouse Initiative that relied on federal agencies, states, ranchers and others to save the bird without invoking potentiall­y stricter limits under the endangered species law.

One tool states planned to use was requiring developers — such as energy companies drilling for oil — to replace destroyed or damaged habitat with similar land elsewhere. The practice is called “off-site compensato­ry mitigation” and is envisioned as a last resort, if the damage cannot be avoided or minimized.

But the Bureau of Land Management, which oversees about 388,000 square miles of public land, announced on July 24 that it would no longer use mandatory off-site compensato­ry mitigation.

The bureau said it did not have the legal authority to enforce the requiremen­t. It was one of numerous Obama-era environmen­tal regulation­s and practices rolled back by the Trump administra­tion.

Some state officials and environmen­tal groups worry that the government's decision could weaken the initiative.

Hickenloop­er, a Democrat, wrote a letter to the Bureau of Land Management saying the move “jeopardize­s BLM's ability to implement or enforce critical components” of the federal plan for the greater sage grouse in his state.

Jason Miner, an adviser to Oregon Democratic Gov. Kate Brown, told federal officials that the state was “concerned and unsupporti­ve.”

Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval and Utah Gov. Gary Herbert, both Republican­s, also expressed concern and asked for more informatio­n.

 ?? David Zalubowski / Associated Press ?? Male greater sage grouse perform mating rituals near Walden, Colo. Some Western governors say a Trump administra­tion directive may end land swaps with energy companies to protect the bird.
David Zalubowski / Associated Press Male greater sage grouse perform mating rituals near Walden, Colo. Some Western governors say a Trump administra­tion directive may end land swaps with energy companies to protect the bird.

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