The Sun (San Bernardino)

Removing Joshua trees is illegal

Supervisor­s approve new penalties of up to $20,000 for a third-time violation

- By Beau Yarbrough byarbrough@scng.com

San Bernardino County doesn’t think Joshua trees are threatened — but officials do think they’re valuable. And if you mess with them, you’ll pay a price.

On Tuesday, the San Bernardino County Board of Supervisor­s approved new penalties for the “unlawful removal” of Joshua trees in the county. The board approved the penalties unanimousl­y and without comment.

Previously, illegally removing a Joshua tree was a misdemeano­r, punishable by up to a $1,000 fine.

But once the ordinance is adopted — currently set for June 14 — violators will be subject to escalating fines, starting at $5,000 for a first conviction, $10,000 for a second conviction and up to $20,000 or imprisonme­nt for up to six months, or both, for a third violation.

Tuesday’s decision wasn’t made in a vacuum. There have been increasing calls to protect the plants — which are actually succulents, not trees — in recent years.

A paper published in June 2019 by researcher­s at UC Riverside’s Center for Conservati­on Biology, and other institutes, pre

dicts that at least 80% of the Joshua trees in Joshua Tree National Park will be wiped out by 2100.

Climate change has made summer temperatur­es in the park higher than ever and winter temperatur­es even lower. Strands of trees that have stood for thousands of years will likely die off, leaving only those in the highest elevations, although continuing climate change will eventually get them too, according to researcher­s.

According to the 2019 study’s worst-case scenario: The 160,000 acres of Joshua Tree National Park capable of supporting the iconic trees will drop to just 37 acres by 2100.

County officials have rejected the notion that the trees are in danger.

“Scientific evidence does not demonstrat­e that population­s of the western Joshua tree are negatively trending in a way that would lead the (California Department of Fish and Wildlife) to believe that the western Joshua tree is likely to be in serious danger of becoming extinct throughout all or a significan­t portion of its range in the foreseeabl­e future,” the board’s resolution states.

A March 2022 report from the department of fish and wildlife called the trees “abundant and widespread,” lessening the threats to the species.

“The scientific evidence that is currently possessed by the department does not demonstrat­e that population­s of the species are negatively trending in a way that would lead the department to believe that the species is likely to be in serious danger of becoming extinct throughout all or a significan­t portion of its range in the foreseeabl­e future,” the report states.

But San Bernardino County officials think there’s a reason to protect the trees. The ordinance states that Joshua trees have “significan­t psychologi­cal and tangible benefits for both residents and visitors,” serve as a symbol of the region and contribute to the region’s economy.

Tuesday’s actions may also be supervisor­s getting ahead of June’s meeting of California’s Fish and Game Commission.

On Oct. 21, 2019, Brendan Cummings, an attorney for Center for Biological Diversity, filed a petition to list the western Joshua tree — one of two species of Joshua tree, and the one associated with Joshua Tree National Park — as threatened under the California Endangered Species Act. The trees — found only in the Mojave Desert — are in danger due to climate change, fire and developmen­t, according to Cummings.

In September 2020, the commission temporaril­y put the Joshua trees under state protection while they considered a permanent change to the trees’ status. The panel is scheduled to take up the matter, and make a permanent ruling on whether Joshua trees should be treated as a threatened species, at its June 15 and 16 meeting.

“They’re passing this so they can wave it around in front of the state fish and game commission in three weeks’ time saying ‘We don’t need additional protection­s, we’re passing ordinances down here,’” Cummings said Tuesday.

Right now, the county doesn’t have the ability to issue permits for developers to move or remove Joshua trees. Only the state does.

“It’s been well-establishe­d that San Bernardino County’s previous management of Joshua trees was woefully inadequate,” Cummings said.

The higher fines look good on paper, he said, but historical­ly, the county hasn’t enforced the penalties already on the book.

As for what will happen at the Fish and Game Commission meeting in mid-June, Cummings said that “if they follow the science and the law, then they should be protected as a threatened species.”

 ?? SCNG FILE PHOTO ?? Joshua Trees are silhouette­d against a morning sunrise in Yucca Valley. The illegal removal of Joshua trees can lead to fines of $5,000 for first-time violators and upwards of $20,000 for a third-time conviction.
SCNG FILE PHOTO Joshua Trees are silhouette­d against a morning sunrise in Yucca Valley. The illegal removal of Joshua trees can lead to fines of $5,000 for first-time violators and upwards of $20,000 for a third-time conviction.

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