November 8, 2008
WWP Looks Forward to New Administration !

October 17, 2008
WWP Has a Busy End of Summer and Early Fall

News Release
September 2, 2008 - BLM Report On The Murphy Complex Wild Fire Shows That Grazing Has Little Effect On Fire Behavior.

August 12, 2008
WWP moves to protect Sonoran Desert National Monument

July 19, 2008
WWP Wins Court Order Overturning Bush Administration Decision delisting Northern Rocky Mountain wolves. Federal protections restored to wolves in Idaho, Wyoming, Montana, and parts of Oregon, Washington, and Utah

June 6, 2008
News Release: WWP Wins Court Order Overturning Bush Administration Decision Not To List Slickspot Peppergrass

May 16, 2008
News Release: Litigation Filed in Thurston County Superior Court To Challenge Livestock Grazing of Quilomene/Whiskey Dick Wildlife Area

April 28, 2008
WWP Joins Litigation to Overturn Delisting of Wolves in Northern Rocky Mountains

March 13, 2008
WWP Announces Annual Members & Boards Meeting

WWP Files Suite of Motions to Preserve wildlife in Jarbidge

WWP Wins Timetable Assuring Best Science In FWS Status Review of Sage Grouse

WWP Files Litigation to Ensure Whiskey Dick WA is Preserved for Wildlife

March 6, 2008
WWP Joins Joins Coalition Urging Congress to Defund Predator Killing in Wildlife Services

February 27, 2008
WWP Joins 10 Other Groups to Fight Delisting of Wolves in Northern Rockies

February 6, 2008
Federal AUM Fees Released;
Wildlife & Public Looted Again !

January 2, 2008
New York Times Editorial:
Bird in the Brush

December 31, 2007
WWP Extends Thanks To All Our Supporters For Making 2007 A Memorable And Successful Year

December 27, 2007
Casper Star-Tribute:
[WWP] sues on Bighorn grazing

December 4, 2007
WWP Wins Court Order Overturning Bush Administration Decision Not To List Greater Sage Grouse

November 19, 2007
WWP Acts to Protect The Imperiled Montana Grayling In Montana And The Big Lost River Whitefish In Idaho




WWP moves to protect Bighorn National Forest

WWP Litigates to Protect Bighorn National Forest

Thursday December 27, 2007

Group sues on Bighorn grazing
Casper Star Tribune
By TOM MORTON

A conservation group claims the U.S. Forest Service failed to consider all of the impacts of livestock grazing in its adoption of a management plan for the 1.1 million-acre Bighorn National Forest, according to a petition filed last week in federal court in Cheyenne.

The Boise, Idaho-based Western Watersheds Project also wants the Wyoming U.S. District Court to conduct a judicial review of the Forest Service's implementation of the management plans for 32,000 acres of grazing allotments in Piney Creek, Little Piney and Willow Park, according to the petition for review of the agency's action.

Both plans, the group said, "are arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, and/or not in accordance with law... ."

A Forest Service spokesman could not be reached for comment on Wednesday.

The Western Watersheds Project, which also has an office in Pinedale, had challenged and unsuccessfully appealed the Forest Service's 2004 draft environmental impact statement, along with the 2005 forest plan and the final environmental impact statement regarding the impact of various levels of grazing in the forest, according to the petition filed by Elizabeth Richards of Advocates for the West.

Richards could not be reached for comment on Wednesday.

It questioned the Forest Service's analyses of whether the forest lands could sustain grazing; the lack of grazing alternatives; and the effects of grazing on wildlife, riparian areas, water quality and soils.

Likewise, the Western Watersheds Project challenged and unsuccessfully appealed the final environmental assessment and the Piney Creek allotments decision notice earlier this year, according to the petition.

Regarding the Piney Creek notice, it challenged the study itself, monitoring requirements, lack of alternatives, and "failure to take a hard look at the effects of grazing."

So it filed the petition asking the federal court to reverse and set aside the Bighorn forest plan and the Piney Creek Allotment decision notice, claiming the Forest Service violated the National Environmental Policy Act and the National Forest Management Act.

The Western Watersheds Project and other environmental organizations have protested other aspects of the forest plan, including the amount of logging allowed and roadless protection.

Craig Yancey, district ranger for the Tongue River District of the Bighorn National Forest, was not available for comment on Wednesday. However, Yancey wrote that the environmental impacts were not significant in the May 7 decision notice about the Piney Creek, Little Piney and Willow Park allotment management plans.

Allowing grazing in these allotments will not hurt conditions of rangeland vegetation and the watershed, nor will it hurt water quality, soils, public health or wildlife habitat, he wrote.

Allowing grazing also complies with the National Forest Management Act, the Endangered Species Act and the National Historic Preservation Act, Yancey wrote.

"I find that this alternative best meets the combined needs of the affected environmental resources, while providing a sustainable level of livestock grazing for the permittees and the local communities," Yancey wrote.

Consider joining Western Watersheds Project yourself or enrolling a friend with a gift membership. Joining is easy at WWP's secure online membership page


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