Imperial Valley Press

Sage grouse discussion­s heading back to square one

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SPARKS, Nev. (AP) — Federal scientists and land managers who’ve been crafting strategies to protect a ground-dwelling bird’s habitat across the American West for nearly two decades are going back to the drawing board under a new Trump administra­tion edict to reassess existing plans condemned by ranchers, miners and energy developers.

Federal officials are wrapping up a series of public meetings with three sessions starting Tuesday in Utah ahead of a Nov. 27 cutoff for comment on Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke’s order last month to consider revisions to land management amendments for the greater sage grouse that were adopted under the Obama administra­tion.

Zinke says he wants to make sure the amendments don’t harm local economies in 11 western states and allow the states to have maximum control over the efforts within their borders.

Conservati­onists say it’s a thinly veiled attempt to allow more livestock grazing and drilling, similar to Trump’s efforts to roll back national monument designatio­ns, but on a much larger scale. They warn it could land the hen-sized bird on the endangered species list in 2020 when the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is scheduled to review its 2015 decision not to list it.

“They appear to be dismantlin­g the whole land-planning amendment system and starting over,” said Patrick Donnelly, the Center for Biological Diversity’s Nevada state director.

“It’s revisionis­t history,” he told a Fish and Wildlife Service official during a scoping meeting-turned-brainstorm­ing session at a Sparks hotel-casino Wednesday night.

Instead of recording public testimony, agency officials marked up easel pads with lists of criticisms, concerns and suggestion­s. About 80 participan­ts moved between five breakout groups including “minerals,” ‘’livestock grazing,” and “wildlife and vegetation.”

They treaded familiar ground. Disagreeme­nt reigned over the size of protective buffer zones around grouse breeding grounds, states’ role in setting federal policy and whether cattle or wild horses cause more habitat degradatio­n. There was general agreement that invasive cheat grass is fueling one of the biggest threats - catastroph­ic wildfires - but little consensus on what to do about it.

“I don’t understand why we’re starting all over again,” shouted a man who briefly disrupted the meeting and refused to provide his name.

Nevada Farm Bureau Vice President Doug Busselman said research increasing­ly suggests properly regulated grazing reduces fire fuels. But he said existing policy is “taking a restrictiv­e approach ... and then watching massive fires sweep across the landscape, setting up the process for expansion of cheat grass, then more fire.”

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO/DAVID ZALUBOWSKI ?? Male greater sage grouse perform mating rituals for a female grouse, not pictured, on a lake outside Walden, Colo., on April 20, 2013.
AP FILE PHOTO/DAVID ZALUBOWSKI Male greater sage grouse perform mating rituals for a female grouse, not pictured, on a lake outside Walden, Colo., on April 20, 2013.

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