Walden asks Interior Department where it stands on Malheur monument proposal
ADRIAN, Ore. — Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., has asked Department of Interior Secretary Sally Jewell to formally outline where the federal government stands on a proposal to designate 2.5 million acres in Malheur County as a national monument or wilderness area.
The Owyhee Canyonlands Conservation Proposal, which would impact about 33 percent of the county’s total grazing land, is strongly opposed by the county’s ranchers and farmers.
Walden hopes to receive a response to that Oct. 28 request soon and will keep pushing until he gets one, said Andrew Malcolm, Walden’s communications director.
“We want them to make clear what their intentions are on this proposal,” he said.
In his letter to Jewell, Walden said locking up that much land, which is equal to 43 percent of the county, is “understandably concerning to local communities.”
“These hard-working local residents deserve to know where the federal government stands on the proposal that would affect their daily lives far beyond anyone else’s,” Walden stated.
He also said the proposal could harm agriculture, which “provides the economic base for Malheur County.”
Agriculture generates $370 million annually in farm-gate receipts in the county, and $134 million of that total comes from the livestock industry.
Because the U.S. Bureau of Land Management and other federal agencies manage 73 percent of the county’s lands, “public lands grazing (is) an integral part of most local family ranch operations,” Walden stated. “Greatly restricting use of that land through a monument designation could have disastrous economic impacts to the county and the surrounding region.”
Walden told Jewell that “it’s very important that you ... outline formally to Malheur County (residents) where the DOI stands on this proposal....”
Oregon Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, both Democrats, have also weighed in on the issue and, in a joint statement, said any proposal needs to protect ranching families as well as other existing rights in the area.
“Malheur County has been home to ranch families for generations,” their Oct. 29 letter states. “We want to ensure that agriculture, ranching and other uses of this landscape continue into Oregon’s future.”
Five other Eastern Oregon counties also support Malheur County in its opposition to the proposal.
A Harney County Court resolution opposing the plan said it could reduce ranching operations in Southeastern Oregon, “as the majority of ranches are tied to federal grazing.”
The proposal is being spearheaded by the Oregon Natural Desert Association and the group’s executive director, Brent Fenty, said the plan’s supporters would be happy to work with Malheur County residents to help craft a proposal palatable to both sides.
“We’re certainly ready and willing to have those conversations,” he said.
According to Fenty, 100 Oregon businesses have signed letters urging Wyden to support the proposal and more than 10,500 petition signatures favoring the plan have been collected.
Fenty said proposal proponents support congressional action to approve the plan but opponents say they anticipate supporters will ask President Barack Obama to use his powers under the Antiquities Act to designate the land as a national monument or wilderness area.