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Western Watersheds Project Wins A Dramatic Court Victory in Washington State and An Award From Local Chambers of Commerce and Also Files a 60-day Notice of Intent to Sue the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for Precluding the Listing of Sage Grouse Under the Endangered Species Act
~ Jon Marvel
Jon Marvel

Friends,

Western Watersheds Project won an important lawsuit in Washington State on April 2, 2010.

In a big but welcome surprise, Thurston County Superior Court Presiding Judge Paula Casey ruled from the bench that the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife’s authorization of livestock grazing on the Asotin Wildlife Area in eastern Washington was unlawful under the Washington Administrative Procedures Act.

Stalk-leaved Monkey FlowerThe Judge noted that the agency had disregarded its own scientists, who repeatedly warned the agency that the grazing was harming the native fish and wildlife.  Fish and wildlife on the area includes steelhead, deer, elk, and mountain quail as well as several rare plants such as Spalding’s catchfly and Stalk-leaved Monkeyflower.

The WDFW, under political pressure from Washington Governor Christine Gregoire and the Washington Cattlemen's Association, opened the Asotin Wildlife Area to grazing in 2006.  This was despite the fact that portions of the area were purchased with funding from the Bonneville Power Administration as “fish and wildlife mitigation” for the Columbia River dams.

Last year, the same court ruled that a separate WDFW grazing lease on the Whiskey Dick/Quilomene Wildlife Area violated the law for failing to do any analysis under the State Environmental Protection Act.  WWP has a pending action challenging the WDFW's plans to expand grazing and fencing throughout the Whiskey Dick/Quilomene Area, home to one of the last remnants of the highly imperiled Washington sage-grouse.
 

WWP was very well represented in this case by Kristin Ruether of Advocates For the West.  Well done Kristin !  Thank you ! 

Western Watersheds Project and partners send 60-day Notice of Intent to Sue US Fish & Wildlife Service over failure to extend ESA protections to Sage Grouse   

Western Watersheds Project, The Center for Biological Diversity, and Desert Survivors took the first step in a lawsuit against the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for unlawfully delaying protection under the Endangered Species Act of both the bi-state population of greater sage-grouse and greater sage grouse as a whole by filing a formal notice of intent to sue.

Read the Press Release

Read the 60-day Notice of Intent to Sue

 

Western Watersheds Project wins 'Environmental Advocate of the Year' award from the Ketchum, Sun Valley, and Hailey Chambers of Commerce

Gold StarThe Sun Valley/Ketchum Chamber & Visitors Bureau and the Hailey Chambers of Commerce Board of Directors have jointly awarded Western Watersheds Project its 'Environmental Advocate of the Year'.  The Chambers' Press Release says of WWP:

Environmental Advocate of the Year- Western Watersheds Project

This non-profit has spent the last 17 years working to restore riparian habitat on public lands severely damaged by livestock grazing. WWP has transformed the way the State of Idaho handles its land leases- requiring the state to have free market auctions that give conservation groups equal opportunity to bid against public lands ranchers. The organization has grown from Idaho Watersheds Project and one man, Jon Marvel, to encompass 11 western states and work on over 150 million acres of public land.

Jon Marvel
Executive Director
 

Pintler Slideshow Video

Click to watch a slideshow Video

Click to View Photos of the WDFW Pinter Creek Grazing Pilot Project, 2007

Asotin Wildlife Area Slopes
   Chinook salmon - photo: USFWS Asotin Wildlife Area was purchased as a wildlife preserve 

Pintler Watershed - Asotin Wildlife Area Grazing

 Sidehill spring, Pintler Creek - Asotin Wildlife Area, Washington
© WWP 2007
Asotin Wildlife Area Slopes
 © WWP 2007
WWP member Donald Johnson  traverses trecherous slopes above Pintler Creek.  Slopes such as these are innappropriate for livestock grazing.  Erosion and runoff of sediment following disturbance pollutes the fisheries habitat for which the Asotin Wildlife Area was meant to preserve.

 

 

 

WWP's President of the Board, Kelley Weston's Recent Letter to the Editor:

Disregard of environment is immoral

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Ralph Maughan's Wildlife News
  

Western Watersheds Project Is A West Regional Conservation Organization Working To Protect And Restore Western Watersheds And Wildlife

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

Be sure to visit the WWP web site at http://www.westernwatersheds.org.

© Western Watersheds Project 2009
* All rights reserved.





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