Salazar Taking Stewardship Seriously

NewWest.net (May 3, 2009) -  By GREGORY MOORE.  To hear the public relations arm of the oil and gas industry describe it, Ken Salazar’s first few months on the job as Secretary of the Interior have been a disaster. But if you ask the country’s sportsmen and women, you’ll find they emphatically disagree. Our new Interior Secretary is bringing balance back to fossil fuel leasing and development on federal lands. After eight years of having their own way, energy industry leaders don't like his balanced approach, but most Americans, the owners of our public land, welcome the change.

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Victory for New Mexico's Otero Mesa

DENVER (April 29, 2009) - A three-judge panel of the 10th U.S. Court of Appeals in Denver ruled that the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) failed to uphold the National Environmental Policy Act in it's 2005 Resource Management Plan for Otero Mesa. BLM put together it's plan in response to requests for oil and gas leases on Otero Mesa after Harvey E. Yates Co. struck natural gas there in 1997.

In it's decision, the appeals court said that the BLM failed to consider an alternative that would have put the area off limits to drilling and did not adequately consider potential impacts of drilling on the area's diverse plant and animal life and on a large underground water source.

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New Oil and Gas Rules for Colorado

DENVER (April 22, 2009) - Governor Ritter today signed into law new rules for oil and gas development in Colorado. Several years ago the new rules were just a vision of Dennis Beuchler of the Colorado Wildlife Federation and Bob Elderkin of the Colorado Mule Deer Foundation, who were fed up with witnessing the irreperable harm Colorado's energy boom was having on wildlife and wildlands. After gaining the support of more than 70 hunting, fishing and outdoor organizations the new rules were introduced into the Colorado legislature. The new regulations will update 30 year old public health, water and wildlife protections for oil and gas drilling.

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Historic Public Lands Protections Become Law

WASHINGTON (March 30, 2009) - President Obama today signed into law the Omnibus Public Lands Management Act of 2009, one of the most sweeping pieces of conservation and public land management legislation in decades.

This legislation includes more than 160 separate public lands proposals that will secure wilderness designation for more than two million acres in nine states, protect over a thousand miles of rushing rivers and streams and give legal status to the 26-million acre National Landscape Conservation System, which protects some of the most spectacular landscapes.

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BLM Takes Step Backward on Utah Energy Leasing

Decision to open 4.7 million acres of public lands to development with minimal planning prompts criticism by sportsmen’s groups

SALT LAKE CITY – A move by the Utah Bureau of Land Management to forgo comprehensive environmental analysis in its management of energy development on 4.7 million acres of federal public lands overseen by the agency’s Fillmore Field Office was criticized in a letter to Utah BLM Director Selma Sierra by numerous state and national sportsmen’s organizations, Sportsmen for Responsible Energy Development announced today.

The public lands encompassed by the Fillmore Field Office – the largest BLM field office in the state – include the Deep Creek Mountains in western Utah, home to mule deer, elk, bighorn sheep,sage grouse and Bonneville cutthroat trout. The agency’s decision to conduct a bare-bones environmental assessment, or EA, in place of a more detailed environmental impact statement, or EIS, in determining the course of future energy projects could jeopardize sensitive habitat and species that depend on it, the letter charges. Signatories include the Backcountry Hunters and Anglers, Federation of Fly Fishers, Mule Deer Foundation, National Wildlife Federation, Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership and Utah Council of Trout Unlimited. Most of the letter’s supporters are members of the SFRED coalition.

“These public lands provide irreplaceable fish and wildlife habitat and sporting opportunities,” said Bob Dibblee, chairman of Utah TU. “Too much is at stake to simply conduct a quick assessment and then rubber-stamp approval of a lease sale in this area. Populations of native Bonneville cutthroat trout in the Deep Creek Mountains are hanging by a thread. Rushing into leases in the region could be what snaps that last thread.”

In addition to valuable fisheries, Utah’s Fillmore Field Office comprises some of the state’s most coveted hunting units. Hunters from both Utah and out of state travel to the area to pursue deer and elk, and sportsmen’s groups assert that energy development must be properly planned if these sporting traditions are to continue.

“The BLM isn’t even maintaining the status quo in regards to planning before leasing on these 4.7 million acres,”said John Gale, a NWF regional representative. “Six other field offices in the state of Utah recently conducted environmental impact statements for oil and gas leasing, yet the Fillmore office is using an analysis that falls way short of the norm. A number of limited big-game hunting units could be at risk if the BLM doesn’t change course now and undertake the proper analysis.”

In late 2008, the BLM offered leases in the Fillmore Field Office and then deferred them in order to complete analysis only after sportsmen’s groups underscored the necessity of adequately assessing the impacts to fish, wildlife and sporting resources.

“The potential impacts of oil and gas leasing and development on the 4.7 million acres managed by the Fillmore office are of a magnitude and scale that inhibits and EA,” the letter continues. “While we recognize that the size of an area is not the sole factor that necessitates an EIS, we do believe that the outcomes of such decisions could significantly affect the management of fish, wildlife,water and recreational resources, thereby meeting the significance requirement that triggers an EIS.”

Don Duff, a retired fisheries biologist and BLM biologist who, nearly 35 years ago, identified isolated populations of Bonneville cutthroat trout in the Deep Creek Mountains and negotiated important agreements with landowners and the Goshute Tribe to restore native trout to the region’s waterways, said the EA findings are inconsistent with the fish and game resources on the ground.

“Deferring these leases in December represents a step forward,” said Duff, a volunteer with TU. “Not completing an EIS would take two steps back. Based on my knowledge of the fisheries resources in the proposed lease area, the FONSI response is just not credible. Proceeding without a full EIS makes no sense – it’s standard procedure throughout the state, both by the BLM and the U.S. Forest Service. The BLM should do the right thing on behalf of the fish and game in these mountains and, of course, the hunters and anglers who come to the Deeps every year.”

On Feb. 4, Interior Sec. Ken Salazar announced the withdrawal of 77 parcels offered in the Dec. 19 sale, which was dogged by controversy due to the sensitive nature of the areas to be leased.

“Overall, American sportsmen support public-lands energy development that is pursued in consideration of current science and the habitat needs of fish and wildlife,” said Joel Webster, a TRCP field representative. “This isn’t a case of having to decide between drilling or not drilling. This is about making sure that the BLM meets its obligation to hunters and anglers by properly evaluating and planning oil and gas leasing in a way that safeguards fish, wildlife and sportsmen’s values.”


Contact: Corey Fisher, TU, 406-546-2979, cfisher@tu.org

John Gale, NWF, 303-441-5156, galej@nwf.org

Joel Webster, TRCP, 406-360-3904, jwebster@trcp.org


Read the sportsmen’s letter.

 

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