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Op-Ed | Support The Working Landscapes Of Point Reyes National Seashore

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A pastoral zone was created decades ago to allow cattle to graze within Point Reyes National Seashore/Kevin Lunny

A pastoral zone was created decades ago to allow cattle to graze within Point Reyes National Seashore/Photo via Sarah Rolph

Ranching in Point Reyes National Seashore is a valuable heritage that is being falsely maligned.

Anti-ranch activists contend agriculture was never meant to stay in the Seashore, citing one clause or another from enabling legislation or House hearings. But the first thing you learn when you try to go to the source is that there is no one source. Ranching was a purpose of the park from the beginning; as then-Secretary Ken Salazar said in his 2012 memo directing the Seashore to provide 20-year agreements, “Long-term preservation of ranching was a central concern of local interests and members of Congress as they considered legislation to establish the Point Reyes National Seashore in the 1950s and early 1960s.”

The enabling legislation was signed in 1962, and has been amended several times; none of those changes altered the original intent of retaining ranching as part of the Seashore. This history has been carefully detailed by environmental historian Laura Watt in her book, The Paradox of Preservation: Wilderness and Working Landscapes at Point Reyes National Seashore, a history of the Seashore that sheds light on every aspect of its foundation, evolution, and management, including lots of detail about the re-introduction of the Tule elk.

The importance of these ranchlands was recognized last year with national historic certifications. The new Point Reyes Peninsula Dairy Ranches Historic District and Olema Valley Diary Ranches Historic District are now on the National Register of Historic Places. Speaking of this designation, Seashore Superintendent Cicely Muldoon told the Santa Rosa Press Democrat, “National parks are so much more than sweeping landscapes. They are keepers of our national heritage, both natural and cultural.”

The facts show that ranching on Point Reyes is a net positive. Grasslands benefit from grazing. The iconic landscapes we love at the Seashore are the result of hundreds of years of grassland management, first by the Coast Miwok peoples, then by the Spanish and Mexican rancheros, then by the Anglo-American settlers and new immigrants, who called the place “cow heaven” for its incredibly lush grasses fed by the foggy climate. Today’s well-managed grazing practices provide not only aesthetic benefits—those gorgeous green hills and fields, emerald vistas extending to the sea—but also environmental benefits.

These benefits are buried in the Seashore’s current Draft Environmental Impact Statemen, but you can find them if you look. While Alternative F, the elimination of ranching, is described largely in glowing terms, the truth is that, as the DEIS says on page 139: “Over the long-term, however, the cessation of ranching may not result in overall beneficial impacts, especially in grasslands, which constitute 48 percent of the planning area. Rates of shrub encroachment into grasslands, invasive perennial grasses, vegetative fuels (both herbaceous and woody), and the consequent risk of large, intense wildfires are all likely to increase...”

I find it astonishing that the Park Service would underplay the risk of large, intense wildfires. But, sadly, officials at Point Reyes National Seashore do not have a good track record of telling the truth.

Nor do they have a good track record of following their own planning processes. In 1998, when the Seashore decided to create a free-ranging elk herd, a formal planning process was required. The 1998 Elk Management Plan and Environmental Assessment promised that the elk would be kept off the ranches, that the carrying capacity of the new herd would be studied and optimized, and that the population of the new herd would be kept in check. None of these promises has been kept.

A final environmental assessment or environmental impact statement has the status of law. If the Seashore can ignore the elk-management EA, why should we expect them to abide by this new EIS, or any other?

The DEIS uses the current range of the roaming elk as its baseline. But the elk were never supposed to be allowed into the pastoral zone. The baseline should be the conditions described under the 1998 elk management plan and environmental assessment.

Bull elk at Point Reyes National Seashore/NPS, Tim Bernot

Bull elk at Point Reyes National Seashore/NPS, Tim Bernot

The DEIS also plays into the hands of anti-ranch activists by discussing lethal control of the elk. Every news headline I have seen about the DEIS has used this angle. And yet, the DEIS makes it clear that when it comes to protecting livestock and property from elk depredations, lethal control is off the table; the plan is to continue to use hazing, which does not work and is cruel to the animals.

Lethal control is being proposed only for controlling the population of the Drakes Beach herd, and the Seashore says it might kill around 10 elk. The Seashore tells us that hundreds of its re-introduced Tule elk have died, from thirst, starvation, mineral deficiencies, and illness. Why isn’t population control being taken seriously for all of the elk on Point Reyes? Is this DEIS really focused on responsible natural resource management, or is it meant to increase pressure on the ranchers?

Another important benefit of ranching is its potential for helping to solve the climate crisis. Rangeland managers around the world are excited about the positive climate impacts of carbon farming. The Marin Carbon Project and the Carbon Cycle Institute are doing cutting-edge research and working closely with Marin ranchers to create carbon farming plans that are improving soils by increasing soil organic matter, and reducing atmospheric carbon in the process. Forward-thinking Point Reyes ranchers are interested in joining this project, but so far the Seashore has not allowed it.

The DEIS mentions carbon farming only in the appendices, and doesn’t include this important issue in its analysis, even though it was raised during scoping; this should be corrected in the final draft.

The DEIS claims that ranching has adverse impacts on native plants, but the documents they cite for these claims don’t say any such thing. The Natural Resource Condition Assessment cited in the DEIS says, “Information was insufficient to determine the trend for invasive plant and rare plant populations,” “the PORE range data set provides information about only one small part of the overall Point Reyes landscape,” and, further, that “none of the indicator rankings were considered to have a high degree of certainty.”

In fact, grazing is so important to the ecological health of these grasslands that if ranching were eliminated, the Seashore’s plan is to bring in its own livestock, under contract, and/or do lots of mechanical mowing. (Page 125: “The use of limited prescribed grazing is considered under alternatives with no or reduced livestock grazing because this would mitigate some undesirable impacts of grazing reduction or removal.”)

The DEIS is filled with deceptions like this. The preferred alternative is presented in a way that sounds like it gives ranchers everything they want; the appendices make it clear that, in practice, it won’t. Row crops are supposedly allowed—but they can’t be irrigated, must be sown by hand, can’t be more than two-and-a-half acres, and no control of, say, gophers, is allowed. So much for row crops. The same with goats and sheep—supposedly they are allowed, but the new zoning requirements would keep them out of the places they are needed to control brush.

Perhaps the most shocking deception in the DEIS is in the description of its purpose and need for action. The DEIS says on page 4: “In 2013, at the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, the NPS Director issued a Delegation of Authority authorizing lease/permit terms for up to 20 years and directing NPS to initiate a National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) process to evaluate the issuance of long-term leases.” That is not true. There is no mention of NEPA in either then-Secretary Salazar’s Nov. 29, 2012, decision memo or then-National Park Service Director Jon Jarvis’s Jan. 13, 2013, delegation of authority. Instead of following these directives, the Seashore is using them as an excuse to validate the proliferation of elk on ranchlands and to further restrict ranching.

The Seashore is rewriting history to suit its current preferences, and using NEPA as a weapon to try to get what it wants—the elimination of ranching or its micro-management to the death. There are no apparent legal restraints on the power of the park service, but, morally, it is wrong to deceive the public in this way.

Ranching on Point Reyes is a valuable cultural heritage that is beneficial to the land. The multi-generation ranching families of Point Reyes are an asset to the Seashore, aesthetically, economically, culturally, and environmentally. Secretary Salazar had it right when he said, “These working ranches are a vibrant and compatible part of Point Reyes National Seashore, and both now and in the future represent an important contribution to the Point Reyes' superlative natural and cultural resources."

Sarah Rolph is a longtime business writer and research analyst who now writes narrative non-fiction. She grew up in California and is based in Carlisle, Massachusetts. In 2006 she published a history of a venerable Maine diner. Her work-in-progress documents the shutdown of Drakes Bay Oyster Farm.

Comments

Mzny thanks Sarah!  Your comments are right on and helpful.  P


For an alternative perspective, http://shameofpointreyes.org. 


The proposal by the NPS to retain and expand ranching activities on park lands is purely political. A few very recent developments affecting the planning area illustrate this point. First, the Olema Valley Dairy Ranches Historic District was listed in the National Register on April 9, 2018, and the Point Reyes Peninsula Dairy Ranching Historic District was listed on October 29, 2018. Why didn't these listings happen earlier? Because the listings were done to try to more firmly anchor ranching into the parks.

Second, Congressman Jared Huffman sponsored a bill that directed the Secretary of the Interior "to manage agricultural properties consistent with Congress' longstanding intent that working ranches and dairies continue to be authorized to operate on agricultural property within the Point Reyes National Seashore and Golden Gate National Recreation Area" and authorized issuance of leases or special use permits of 20 years. The bill was passed by the United States House of Representatives, but fortunately the bill died in session. There are fears that even if the NPS decided to adopt Alternative F and phase out the ranches, that certain politicians would quickly try to end run the agency yet again.


Shame on you Sarah Rolph.  Your article is so inaccurate you might as well announce that you were hired by the park service to spread lies.  As for Phyliss Faber's quote above, supporting this article, well she's a principle founder of RAG, Resilient Agricultural Group, who supports anything ranching regardless of impacts or reality.  Here's a gem of a quote by Faber in the past; 
We just want to change the founding legislation to make ranching permanent in the seashore."  Think about that quote.  It not only admits that the legislation never stated ranching was meant to stay in the seashore but shows the level of political maneuvering this ranching mafia pursues, including CHANGING legislation!
livestock grazing is the opposite of important for ecology - it's the worst thing that has ever happened to the west.  You can use your eyes and witness this yourself in Point Reyes National Seashore! Or you could read this article of how the beauty of nature was able to recover once grazing was removed.  http://www.patagoniapark.org/conservation_and_restoration.htm
Of course, that's probably just hippies lying and using CGI to show the recovery.  That makes a lot more sense than ranchers claiming that thousands of 1500 pound bovines trampling and eating everything is good for the habitat.  One of the two is a lie.  Which one makes money from spreading lies?


As long as we are celebrating the culture of dairy maybe they could put up some plaques in the park paying tribute to foot-binding, slavery, seal-clubbing, whaling, 


Embarrassing article for "National Park Traveler"...the corruption of big ranching reaches even to this publication.


We must recognize that local decisions are not limited to localized or isolated regional reactions, but in fact have the potential for tremendous impacts on a global scale.  If we cannot restore Point Reyes National Seashore into the park it was once promised to be and fulfill its potential, then I fear we have little hope in turning the tide against the numerous environmental issues confronting us now and those issues surely to emerge going forward.

 

It is true that we face an overwhelming amount of environmental problems unlike ever before, from the Climate Crisis and mass biodiversity loss, to ocean acidification and coral reef bleaching - habitat fragmentation, melting glaciers, toxic algal blooms, soil infertility, animal agriculture, over-antibiotic use in animal agriculture, superbugs, invasive species, shifting weather patterns, fish stock depletion, aquifer reduction, unprecedented fire seasons and hurricane strength, freshwater resource diminishment, bird migration routes changing, insect populations disappearing - the list goes on and on and is extremely long to say the least.  Make no mistake, these environmental problems are often complex and interconnected, and they are deeply rooted in an Anthropocentric mindset that sees the human not as part of nature, but separate from it.  Unless we take immediate substantive steps to prioritize our environment instead of devalue and diminish it, current and future generations will suffer the negative consequences of a far reaching ignorance and neglect.

 

Perhaps one the greatest threats facing all of us today is "Shifting Baseline Syndrome."  This concept, when applied to the natural world, was first considered by scientist Daniel Pauly regarding his work on fisheries management.  Pauly described how fisheries scientists sometimes failed "to identify the correct 'baseline' population size (for example how abundant the population of a fish species was before human exploitation) and thus were working with a shifted baseline."  Pauly went on describing how "radically depleted fisheries were evaluated by experts who used the state of the fishery at the start of their careers as the baseline, rather than the fishery in its untouched state.  Areas that swarmed with a particular species hundreds of years ago, may have experienced long term decline, but it is the level of decades previously that is considered the appropriate reference point for current populations.  In this way large declines in ecosystems or species over long periods of time were, and are, masked."  This would in turn result in the "loss of perception of change that occurs when each generation redefines what is "natural."

 

What is actually natural out in Point Reyes National Seashore (or PRNS for short) has nothing to do with ranching or animal agriculture.  Some would even have you believe that Tule Elk never existed in PRNS.  Believe me, I've heard it with my own ears, "the Tule Elk aren't native, they were introduced."  Shifting Baseline Syndrome has found a foothold in far too many minds and this in turn has had and continues to have a devastating impact on our interconnected natural world.  Upon attending yet another general management plan 'meeting' (if you can call it that) I actually heard one rancher say to his friends, "What do they want to do with our land now?"  This way of thinking is as ignorant as it is shortsighted.


Sheryl Watkins:
Embarrassing article for "National Park Traveler"...the corruption of big ranching reaches even to this publication.

What "big ranching"?  Do you know what you're talking about and why the need to demonize small family ranchers with such a loaded description?

I remember back when Drakes Bay Oyster Company ended we were told that no there was no intent to go after the cattle and dairy ranches.  Obviously a lie.


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