Friday, May 7, 2021 CapitalPress.com 3 Biden administration will look to overturn spotted owl habitat rollbacks By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Biden administra- tion announced April 29 it intends to revise or with- draw a Trump-era rule that would roll back 3.4 million acres of federally protected “critical habitat” for the northern spotted owl. It is the latest twist in the battle over the small, for- est-dwelling owl, with envi- ronmental and timber inter- ests lobbing lawsuits on both sides. Days before leaving offi ce in January, Trump’s Interior Department reduced critical habitat for the spot- ted owl by roughly one-third in Oregon, Washington and California. The rule was supposed to be implemented in March, but was delayed by the new administration until April 30 pending fur- ther review. Now, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service says it will block the rule until Dec. 15 while it prepares a revision or withdrawal. “Robust habitat protec- tions are essential to the conservation of the northern spotted owl,” said Alyssa Hausman, congressional and legislative aff airs spe- cialist for the Fish and Wild- life Service, in an email sent April 28 to lawmakers. Hausman said loss of habitat due to logging, land conversions, natural dis- turbances such as fi re and windstorms, and competi- tion with barred owls have led a decline of spotted owls in much of their historic range. The northern spotted owl was listed as threatened under the Endangered Spe- cies Act in 1990. Initially, the USFWS set aside 6.9 million acres of critical hab- itat where the birds nest. A new management plan for the species in 2012 increased protected habi- tat to 9.5 million acres. The American Forest Resource Council, a regional timber trade group, led a lawsuit against the expansion, argu- ing it wrongfully restricted logging in more than 1 mil- lion acres of land where the owls do not live. Part of the 9.5 million 9th Circuit hears arguments over ‘grazing preference’ By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Tom Kogut/USFS A northern spotted owl in the Giff ord Pinchot National Forest of Washington state. The species is at the center of ongoing lawsuits. acres also encroached on land that was to be managed by the Bureau of Land Man- agement for sustainable tim- ber production — known as the Oregon and California Revested Lands, or O&C lands, scattered across 18 Western Oregon counties. Nick Smith, AFRC spokesman, said the group strongly supports the Jan- uary 2021 rule “because it provides an opportunity for agencies to address the real threats to the species,” including large wildfi res and the barred owl. “Until the federal govern- ment focuses on those actual threats, the (spotted owl) is just going to continue to decline, along with our rural communities,” Smith said. The AFRC and Associ- ation of O&C Counties is already suing the govern- ment over delaying habitat rollbacks. The eff ort to over- turn the rule has also drawn condemnation from sev- eral Western Republicans, including Oregon Rep. Cliff Bentz. “It is shameful that the Biden administration would rather kowtow to radi- cal environmental groups than follow the science and the law,” Bentz said in a statement. Nine environmental groups fi led their own law- suit in March seeking to overturn the Trump admin- istration’s spotted owl rule. Ryan Shannon, staff attor- ney at the Center for Bio- logical Diversity, one of the plaintiff s, described the hab- itat reduction as “inaccurate, sloppy and illegal.” “Our goal is to make sure the owl retains all the habitat protections it scientifi cally needs to recover,” Shannon said. On Aug. 11, 2020, the USFWS proposed a habi- tat reduction of just 204,653 acres. But the fi nal rule in January called for 3.4 mil- lion acres removed, more than 16 times that amount. According to the Biden administration, the 3.2 mil- lion-acre diff erence was never presented to the pub- lic for notice and comment. The agency has since gath- ered more than 2,000 addi- tional public comments out- lining concerns with the rule. “Based on this informa- tion, the service intends to prepare a notice of proposed rule-making to revise or withdraw the January 2021 fi nal rule to address issues that the public comments raised,” the agency stated. An Oregon family wants to convince a federal appeals court that its ranch’s “graz- ing preference” was can- celed contrary to the U.S. Bureau of Land Manage- ment’s own regulations. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals heard oral arguments on May 3 in the lawsuit, which raises ques- tions about the interaction between private lands and public grazing allotments. After losing a permit to graze on 30,000 acres of BLM allotments in nearby Idaho, ranchers Mike and Linda Hanley leased their private “base property” in Jordan Valley, Ore., to their daughter and son-in-law, Martha and John Corrigan. When the Corrigans applied for a new grazing permit — citing the private ranch’s “grazing preference” to the allotments — the BLM rejected the request in 2017. The BLM claimed the property’s grazing prefer- ence, which gave it prior- ity for access to public allot- ments, was lost along with Hanley’s grazing permit. The agency’s interpreta- tion of the preference rules was upheld by a federal judge last year, but an attor- ney for Hanleys and Cor- rigans has now asked the 9th Circuit to overturn that Mateusz Perkowski/Capital Press File From left to right, Mike Hanley and his wife, Linda, stand with daughter Martha Corrigan and her hus- band, John, at the family’s ranch near Jordan Valley, Ore. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals heard oral arguments May 3 in the family’s lawsuit against the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. mine the important connec- tion between private prop- erty and surrounding grazing allotments. Schroeder said the BLM has in the past revoked graz- ing preferences separately from grazing permits, which simply allow cattle to be released onto government property. In the case of Nevada rancher Wayne Hage, an icon of the “Sagebrush Rebellion” against govern- ment grazing restrictions, 12 years elapsed between the two actions. The government’s own defi nition of grazing pref- erence provides a property with super-priority to apply for grazing access regard- less of why a permit was lost, Schroeder said. decision. Alan Schroeder, the fam- ily’s attorney, argued that BLM must undertake a sep- arate legal process to elimi- nate the grazing preference, which provides the ranch property with fi rst-priority access to permits for nearby grazing allotments. The Hanleys and Cor- rigans believe the BLM’s decision could set a trou- bling precedent for ranch- ers’ due process rights, since they weren’t allowed to chal- lenge the BLM’s elimination of their property’s valuable grazing preference. 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