
Livestock
have done more damage to the Earth than the chainsaw and bulldozer combined.
Not only have livestock been around longer than developers, miners, and
loggers, but they have grazed nearly everywhere. On public land across the
West, millions of non-native livestock (including cattle, sheep, goats and
horses) remove and trample vegetation, imperil species, damage soil, spread
invasive weeds, despoil water, deprive native wildlife of forage and shelter,
accelerate desertification and even contribute to global warming.
"Livestock grazing is the most damaging use of public land." - Bruce Babbitt, former Secretary of the Interior
While causing extensive environmental damage,
public lands ranching offers few benefits, even to those in the livestock
business: only 3% our nation’s beef supply comes from federal public lands and
only 3% of American ranchers are federal grazing permittees - many of whom make
little to no profit notwithstanding federal subsidies.
WildEarth Guardians and Public Lands Grazing Reform
WildEarth Guardians’
campaign to reduce and eliminate public lands grazing dates to our founding in
1995. We employ a variety of tools to expose the environmental harm, and
fiscal, economic and social effects of public lands ranching and build public
support to reform public lands grazing.
Because federal land
management agencies continue to coddle ranchers and ignore long-standing and
widespread environmental damage, litigation based advocacy has been an
essential component of our public lands grazing campaign. The ubiquity of
livestock production and the diversity of landscapes and resources damaged by
grazing means that there are a diversity of opportunities to hold ranching
accountable under federal environmental laws. We have litigated to enforce the
Endangered Species Act, Clean Water Act, the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act, the
Wilderness Act and numerous other environmental statutes in an effort to
protect western streams, rivers, wetlands, forests, grasslands and deserts from
the harmful effects of livestock grazing. One of our major legal victories
resulted in the elimination of livestock grazing from more than 300 miles of
perennial streams on national forests throughout the Gila River watershed.
In addition, we have
exposed ‘cowboy socialism’ in Arizona and New Mexico by participating in the
free market to “unranch” state school trust lands and demonstrate that these
lands are grossly undervalued. These efforts highlight the welfare ranching
theme, by juxtaposing ranching subsidies and cut-rate grazing fees with the
needs of public school children, who would benefit from increased revenue
generated by more equitable and democratic leasing policies. In New Mexico we
have acquired numerous state land leases and engaged local schools in restoring
damaged lands, maximizing public education and support for ending livestock
industry hegemony over state lands. In addition to our state lands program, we
work to expose and undermine federal fiscal policies that subsidize the
livestock industry on federal public lands.
WildEarth Guardians also
has invested major organizational resources to protect imperiled plants and
animals threatened with extinction by pursuing protection for them under the
Endangered Species Act. WildEarth Guardians Endangered Species Act Listing
program focuses on obtaining ESA listing for hundreds of imperiled species.
Once these species are listed, invoking the ESA on western public lands and
waters will dramatically increase the pressure on grazing permittees to concede
that livestock production is unsustainable in these ecosystems.
Finally, in 1999 WildEarth Guardians became a
founding member of the National Public Lands Grazing Campaign that seeks to
introduce federal legislation to authorize voluntary federal grazing permit retirement.
photo credit: George Wuethner |