The Norwalk Hour

Reprieve sought for cattle as shooting operation nears

- By Susan Montoya Brown

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. — Ranchers are asking a U.S. district judge to delay what they describe as a potential mass slaughter of as many as 150 “unauthoriz­ed” cows on public land in southweste­rn New Mexico.

Plans by the U.S. Forest Service call for shooting the cattle with high-powered rifles from a helicopter and leaving the carcasses in the Gila Wilderness. Critics say that could result in an estimated 65 tons of dead animals being left in the forest for months until they decompose or are eaten by scavengers.

Officials closed a large swath of the forest Monday and were scheduled to begin the shooting operation Thursday. After hearing hours of arguments Wednesday, Judge James Browning said he would review the case and make a decision before the end of the day.

The New Mexico Cattle Growers' Associatio­n, individual ranchers and the Humane Farming Associatio­n filed a complaint in federal court Tuesday, alleging that agency officials were violating their own regulation­s and oversteppi­ng their authority.

The complaint states that court interventi­on is necessary to put an immediate stop to “this unlawful, cruel, and environmen­tally harmful action, both now and in the future.”

The ranchers say the agency's existing regulation­s call for shooting the animals as a last resort and could set precedent for how federal officials handle unbranded livestock on vacant allotments or deal with other

land management conflicts across the West.

“There's a severe danger here, not just in this particular case and the horrific results that it will actually bare if this is allowed to go forward. But it also has long-term ramificati­ons for the power of federal agencies to disregard their regulation­s that they themselves passed,” Daniel McGuire, an attorney for the ranchers, told the judge.

The Gila National Forest issued its final decision to gun down the wayward

cattle last week amid pressure from environmen­tal groups to protect the Gila Wilderness. The groups have been raising concerns for years that cattle are compromisi­ng water quality and habitat for other species as they trample stream banks in sensitive areas.

Much of the debate during Wednesday's hearing centered on whether the animals were unauthoriz­ed livestock or feral cows, as the Forest Service has been referring to them.

Ranchers contend the cattle in question are the descendant­s of cows that legally grazed the area in the 1970s before the owner went out of business. They pointed to DNA and genetic markers, saying the temperamen­t of the animals doesn't mean they cease to be domesticat­ed livestock.

As defined in Forest Service regulation­s, unauthoriz­ed livestock refers to any cattle, sheep, goats or hogs that are not authorized by permit to be grazing on national forest land. The regulation­s calls for an impoundmen­t order to be issued and the livestock rounded up, with lethal action being a final step for those that aren't captured.

Despite issuing such an order earlier this month, the agency argues it's not required to follow the removal procedures outlined by the regulation­s because the cattle don't fit the definition of livestock since they are no longer domesticat­ed or being kept or raised by any individual.

Government attorney Andrew Smith said the cows have no pedigree.

“So it does make a difference what these cows are. They're multigener­ations of wildness going on,” he told the judge.

Smith also argued that Congress has charged the Forest Service with protecting national forest land and that eradicatin­g the cattle would put an end to decades of damage. He said previous gathering efforts over the decades only put a dent in the population but that an aerial shooting operation in 2022 was able to take out 65 cows in two days.

If the judge delays the project, Smith suggested that the population would rebound and last year's effort would be wasted.

McGuire countered that Congress conferred authority on the Forest Service to make rules and regulation­s to protect and preserve the forest, not a license for the agency to do anything it wants.

“The Forest Service has a specific regulation that describes how they're supposed to remove these unauthoriz­ed cattle,” he said. “They simply don't want to follow it because they say it's too hard . ... Well, I'm sorry that's not actually an excuse to not follow the regulation­s.”

Ranchers contend the cattle in question are the descendant­s of cows that legally grazed the area in the 1970s before the owner went out of business.

 ?? Robin Silver/Associated Press ?? In this photo provided by Robin Silver, a feral bull is seen along the Gila River in the Gila Wilderness in southweste­rn New Mexico on July 25, 2020. U.S. forest managers in New Mexico are moving ahead with plans to kill feral cattle that they say have become a threat to public safety and natural resources in the nation’s first designated wilderness, setting the stage for more legal challenges over how to handle wayward livestock as drought maintains its grip on the West.
Robin Silver/Associated Press In this photo provided by Robin Silver, a feral bull is seen along the Gila River in the Gila Wilderness in southweste­rn New Mexico on July 25, 2020. U.S. forest managers in New Mexico are moving ahead with plans to kill feral cattle that they say have become a threat to public safety and natural resources in the nation’s first designated wilderness, setting the stage for more legal challenges over how to handle wayward livestock as drought maintains its grip on the West.

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