Obama takes the blame for this one. You can’t hire a corporate rancher as head of the Department of the Interior and expect anything different.
For Immediate Release: Wednesday, November 30, 2011
Contact: Kirsten Stade (202) 265-7337
http://www.peer.org/news/news_id.php?row_id=1537
GRAZING PUNTED FROM FEDERAL STUDY OF LAND CHANGES IN WEST
Scientists Told to Not Consider Grazing Due to Fear of Lawsuits and Data Gaps
Washington, DC — The U.S. Bureau of Land Management is carrying out an ambitious plan to map ecological trends throughout the Western U.S. but has directed scientists to exclude livestock grazing as a possible factor in changing landscapes, according to a scientific integrity complaint filed today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER). The complaint describes how one of the biggest scientific studies ever undertaken by BLM was fatally skewed from its inception by political pressure.
Funded with up to $40 million of stimulus funds, BLM is conducting Rapid Ecoregional Assessments in each of the six main regions (such as the Colorado Plateau and the Northern Great Plains) covering the vast sagebrush West. A key task was choosing the “change agents” (such as fire or invasive species) which would be studied. Yet when the scientific teams were assembled at an August 2010 workshop, BLM managers informed them that grazing would not be studied due to anxiety from “stakeholders,” fear of litigation and, most perplexing of all, lack of available data on grazing impacts.
Exclusion of grazing was met with protests from the scientists. Livestock grazing is permitted on two-thirds of all BLM lands, with 21,000 grazing allotments covering 157 million acres across the West. As one participating scientist said, as quoted in workshop minutes:
“We will be laughed out of the room if we don’t use grazing. If you have the other range of disturbances, you have to include grazing.”
In the face of this reaction, BLM initially deferred a decision but ultimately opted to –
Remove livestock grazing from all Ecoregional assessments, citing insufficient data. As a result, the assessments do not consider massive grazing impacts even though trivial disturbance factors such as rock hounding are included; and
Limit consideration of grazing-related information only when combined in an undifferentiated lump with other native and introduced ungulates (such as deer, elk, wild horses and feral donkeys).
“This is one of the screwiest things I have ever heard of. BLM is taking the peculiar position that it can no longer distinguish the landscape imprint of antelope from that of herds of cattle,” remarked PEER Executive Director Jeff Ruch, noting BLM has far more data on grazing than it does on other change agents, such as climate change or urban sprawl, that it chose to follow. “Grazing is one of the few ‘change agents’ within the agency’s mandate to manage, suggesting that BLM only wants analysis on what it cannot control.”
Earlier this year, the Interior Department, parent agency for BLM, adopted its first scientific integrity policies prohibiting political interference with, or manipulation of, scientific work. The PEER complaint charges that BLM officials improperly compromised the utility and validity of the Ecoregional assessments for reasons that lacked any technical merit and urges that responsible officials be disciplined.
“This is like the Weather Service saying it will no longer track storms because it lacks perfect information,” added Ruch, pointing out that an extensive formalized Land Health Assessment database, including range-wide assessments of livestock grazing across the sagebrush biome, has existed since at least 2008. “If grazing can be locked so blithely into a scientific broom closet, it speaks volumes about science-based decisionmaking in the Obama administration.”
Yet another case study of a politician putting the short-term political needs ahead of simply “doing the right thing.” It is past time to do away with the tradition of a new president picking the secretary of the Interior from a Western state.
It is clearly time to get rid of the old tradition of appointing Western politicians to head Interior.
Not to change the subject, but take a look at this paper by Jared Diamond. I visited Fontenelle several times in the early 90s while on reserve duty at Offutt Air Force Base, near Omaha.
http://binghamminers.org/faculty/barton/huma/nature/shootdeer.pdf
I agree with your first-paragraph thoughts on Mr. Salazar. The tradition of picking a Western politician to head Interior is sadly way out of date.
This article was very helpful and it appears to be repeitive
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/10/2012 – 21:57.
People might want to read these articles and draw there own conclusions. It might be easier to have hell freeze over then to appoint ecological horse sensed folks to the BLM board. That is why want to help make a balanced study and decisions. I say no more science with science like this we might as well wait out history and watch it repeat itself. We then could say at least we could say its consistant.
http://peer.org/docs/blm/11_30_11_Scientific_Misconduct_Complaint.pdf
http://www.westernwatersheds.org/legal/blmgraze_comments/BLM_Grazing_Reg_Comments_Feb04.pdf
http://www.peer.org/news/news_id.php?row_id=1537 Thank you
Salazar’s failure to consult POTUS gives new Administration a headache (as it should)-
Salazar’s Wolf Decision Upsets Administration Allies
By Juliet Eilperin
Washington Post
It appears that Salazar wasn’t interested in consulting anyone but the Bush Administration personnel and some other agency folks for the “good science” they have already “produced”.
He only consulted governors with less than favorable attitudes on predators, wolves in particular. He had no intention of hearing anything other than what he wanted to hear to make this decision.
Fortunately, not everyone in our halls of governing agree with him. Perhaps due to the fact that they are not ranchers. He didn’t seem to think that his boss needed to be consulted either, even directly following commitments by Obama himself to uphold the ESA and scientific integrity in speeches within 48 hours of announcing this “Friday night” ruling.
Perhaps the same comments on commitment to scientific integrity made by Obama on stem cell research should be applied to the ESA and wolves.