Op-Ed | Anti-Ranch Pressure Groups Misrepresent Facts At Point Reyes

September 21, 2021
Tule elk, Point Reyes National Seashore/NPS file

 Op-Ed | Anti-Ranch Pressure Groups Misrepresent Facts At Point Reyes

By Sarah Rolph

George Wuerthner (Op-Ed | National Park Service Capitulated To Point Reyes Ranchers) strains credulity when he claims the National Park Service capitulated to Point Reyes ranchers; in fact, the NPS has just capitulated to him.

In a last-minute move that appears to be a violation of National Environmental Policy Act, NPS allowed Wuerthner’s anti-ranch pressure group to influence the content of the Final Eenvironmental Impact Statement after it had been finalized. The FEIS requires a 30-day public comment period before the Record of Decision is issued. That period had come and gone, yet before the RoD was issued, the document changed again, without any input from the public or from the Point Reyes agricultural community—but with private input from the anti-ranch lobbyists. That input has supposedly made the document more “balanced.” Apparently Wuerthner is annoyed that NPS didn’t capitulate enough—to him.

These anti-ranch groups habitually misrepresent the history of Point Reyes National Seashore, the ecological facts about Point Reyes, and the legal status of agriculture within the seashore. They pretend to have special knowledge of the situation when they show no understanding of even the most fundamental facts. To take just one example, it’s widely understood that grazing is necessary at Point Reyes to maintain open grasslands and prevent catastrophic wildfires. The EIS is clear on this point. The anti-ranch groups conveniently ignore this important issue.

Lately these pressure groups have been working to create the impression there is a sudden elk crisis in Point Reyes, when the truth is that the elk die-offs are the direct and expected result of the seashore’s hands-off elk management policy. As California Department of Fish and Wildlife, the state agency responsible for elk management in California, has noted, Point Reyes National Seashore is not big enough for a free-ranging herd of elk. There is no longer a top predator population at Point Reyes that can effectively control elk numbers. The result is an over-population of elk.

This was not just predictable, it was predicted—in the elk management plan that both the seashore and the activists ignore. The passive-management experiment failed: the elk management plan should have been updated years ago.

One of the professionally-spun lies that has gotten the most traction is the notion that the ranchers want to eliminate the elk. That is not true. All the ranchers want is for the elk to stop consuming the food that the ranchers pay for—including their organic hay—and to stop harming the animals they tend. All that is needed is a new fence to keep the Limantour herd in its wilderness, and some common-sense elk-management efforts in keeping with best practices for a re-introduced species. Birth control would be a good option. The only reason the activists emphasize lethal culling is to upset people as part of their emotional anti-ranch campaign.

If readers are interested in the history of Point Reyes, I highly recommend the definitive book on the topic, The Paradox of Preservation: Wilderness and Working Landscapes at Point Reyes by Dr. Laura Watt: https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520277083/the-paradox-of-preservation

For readers interested in a factual history of the re-introduction of elk in Point Reyes, and some background on the tule elk population in the rest of California, I recommend Dr. Watt’s published paper on the topic, “The Continuously Managed Wild: Tule Elk at Point Reyes National Seashore,” which is available for free online: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/286302438_The_Continuously_Managed_Wild_Tule_Elk_at_Point_Reyes_National_Seashore

Sarah Rolph is a longtime business writer and research analyst now working in narrative non-fiction. She is writing a book about the taking of Drakes Bay Oyster Farm.

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