• Removing Prieto Wolves is Not the Answer

    Removing Prieto Wolves is Not the Answer

    Wolves are smart, family-oriented animals and science demonstrates that problems with livestock increase following wolf removals. So why does the government keep removing wolves in response to conflict with livestock and hope that solves the same problem? Right now, in the Gila National Forest, there is a wolf family that is facing a huge amount…

  • Feds Sued for Resuscitating Zombie Grazing Permit, Putting Restoration Efforts at Risk

    Feds Sued for Resuscitating Zombie Grazing Permit, Putting Restoration Efforts at Risk

    Western Watersheds Project sued the Arizona Bureau of Land Management today for bringing a long-dead grazing permit back to life and handing it off to a new permittee without any public process. WWP’s press release with a link to the complaint is online here. After nearly thirty years of no authorized grazing (but plenty of…

  • Western Watersheds Project’s statement on new Wilderness bill in Malheur County

    Western Watersheds Project’s statement on new Wilderness bill in Malheur County

    For Immediate Release: November 14, 2019 Contact: Scott Lake, Western Watersheds Project,  (208) 429-1679; scott@westernwatersheds.org   Proposed Malheur legislation sacrifices land heath, elevates livestock above other land uses   BURNS, Ore. – On November 7th, Senators Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley introduced legislation that prioritizes economic development in Malheur County while also designating some public lands as wilderness.…

  • The Lessons of Lobo f1675

    The Lessons of Lobo f1675

    In December 2017, an Arizona hunter knowingly shot and killed a young lobo, took pictures of his “trophy,” and left her body to rot in a field. Someone else saw the photos and reported the killing to the anonymous tip line. Law enforcement officers investigated and, last year, the perpetrator lost his access to national…

  • WWP wins a stay of grazing decision on Agua Fria National Monument

    WWP wins a stay of grazing decision on Agua Fria National Monument

    Just above the northern reaches of the Phoenix megalopolis lies the Agua Fria National Monument, named for the river that runs through it and known for its rich archeological history and the refuge it provides for a broad range of wildlife species, including the imperiled Gila chub, yellow-billed cuckoo and northern Mexican garter snake. It’s a…

  • Forest Service sneaks away sage-grouse protections in FEISs

    Forest Service sneaks away sage-grouse protections in FEISs

    The five long versions of everything the agency did wrong with the Final Environmental Impact Statements “amending” the existing Obama-era sage-grouse land use plans can be found by state on WWP’s website:  Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Utah and Nevada. The short version is this: The agency didn’t just take away over 200,000 acres of protected areas (mostly in Wyoming) and rearrange…

  • Mexican wolf killer has no problem getting job with Mexican wolf recovery program

    Mexican wolf killer has no problem getting job with Mexican wolf recovery program

    On Friday afternoon, this came across my desk: The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Mexican Wolf Recovery Plan, Region 2, intends to issue a sole source award utilizing Simplified Acquisition Procedures to William Bennett Nelson dba Bill Nelson Wildlife Control (DUNS# 117125795) Datil, New Mexico for trapping, capturing and radio collaring of wolves. The contract…

  • 11,000 Miles of New Damage in the Great Basin

    11,000 Miles of New Damage in the Great Basin

    In June, the Bureau of Land Management announced its draft plan to carve 11,000 miles of fuel breaks into the fragile Great Basin landscape. The agency is forging ahead with this plan despite recent scientific paper concluding that there is a lack of empirical evidence validating the effectiveness of fuel breaks in reducing fire spread…

×