Public land us, legislation dominate OCA meeting
BEND — Public land use and the upcoming 2017 Oregon legislative session dominated the conversation at the 2016 Oregon Cattlemen’s Association annual meeting here earlier this month.
The annual meeting featured a roundtable with Northwest Regional Forester Jim Pena and acting BLM State Director Ron Dunton.
Mike Doverspike of Burns asked Pena if there was any more time for ranchers and the Forest Service to “go back and forth” concerning the grazing requirements in the Blue Mountains Forest Plan Revision. Pena assured the cattlemen that grazing will continue to be a part of the region’s management.
“This is our grazing program, too,” Pena said. “The agency believes and I believe, it is important that grazing continue on national forests.”
But to have a plan that follows a long list of federal laws and can withstand a legal challenge, Pena said the Forest Service doesn’t want to put grazing at risk.
“We are committed to work for everybody, including the grazing community,” Pena said.
Providing adequate habitat for fish and wildlife is also part of the balance the Forest Service seeks, following the guidelines of regulatory agencies like U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and National Marine Fisheries Service.
“The Forest Service has to have consistent monitoring to demonstrate benefits of grazing to show permittees are in compliance,” Pena said.
But monitoring takes time and costs money — and the Forest Service doesn’t have much of either. He said increasing firefighting costs hurt the other disciplines’ budgets and range management has been the heaviest hit.
In 1990s a movement started for permittees to self-monitor. He said in a recent case concerning bull trout the Forest Service prevailed because the permittee was in compliance.
Skye Krebs grazes on public land in Wallowa County and has served on the Public Lands Council for many years. He said the Oregon Cooperative Monitoring, modeled after a program in Colorado, is a protocol-driven program that directs permittee self-monitoring. Forest Service and BLM range conservationists then ground-truth the data.
“That is a win/win situation for permittees and agency staffing problems,” Krebs said.
Two big concerns by Oregon livestock producers are two proposed monuments – the Owyhee Canyonlands, fought by Malheur County ranchers for several years, and a new proposal to expand the Cascade-Siskiyou monument in Southern Oregon.
With the 2017 Oregon legislative session on the horizon, Rocky Dallum, the OCA political advocate, said the association will be keeping a close eye on water quality and quantity issues and the ongoing discussion of Senate Bill 1010 passed in 1993 that requires the Oregon Department of Agriculture to help reduce water pollution from agricultural sources.
Matt McElligott, OCA member and president of the Oregon Public Lands Council, said
Keep running cows.
“Historically, we know those permittees and agencies that run them have lawsuits against them and those permits shrunk or were taken away. This is not good for these communities in the poorest county in state.”
As for the expansion of the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument, McElligott said that proposal took the ranching community by surprise.
Lee Bradshaw from Southern Oregon said his permit is in the middle of the proposed expansion. He told Ron Dunton, acting state BLM director, that permittees were not alerted to a public meeting on the proposal.
“We were not notified through the BLM,” Bradshaw said. “My range con knew nothing. Why didn’t we get notified?”
Dunton said the proposal was not from the BLM, it came from what the congressional delegation.
With the 2017 Oregon Legislative session on the horizon, Rocky Dallum, OCA’s political advocate, said the Cattlemen will be watching water quality and quantity issues and the ongoing implementation of Senate Bill 1010 that requires the Oregon Department of Agriculture help reduce water pollution from agricultural sources.