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Ranchers Dodge Reforms On Point Reyes National Seashore, Yet Still Complain

By Laura Cunningham 

In a heated opinion piece in National Parks Traveler railing against environmental organizations and citizen groups who are pushing to protect the unique and dramatic Pacific Coast landscapes at Point Reyes National Seashore, Ms. Sarah Rolph accuses a “pressure group” of covertly influencing the National Park Service. Here, visitors enjoy whale-watching, hiking, beach-going, and photographing wildlife. We disagree.

During the recently concluded review by the seashore of their General Management Plan Amendment—a plan which will guide how portions of the famous park unit are managed for the next 30-plus years with respect to livestock operations – the Park Service made minor (perhaps “token” would be more appropriate) changes departing from its proposed plan. Yes this was legally reviewed under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), but no, environmentalists didn’t influenced the Final Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) after it had been finalized.

The management plan for Point Reyes National Seashore favors cattle over native Tule elk/NPS file

The management plan for Point Reyes National Seashore allows the killing of native Tule elk/NPS file

Conservation groups commented on this environmental review document, just as the ranchers did, during allotted comment periods. The Park Service chose its preferred alternative of expanding ranching, lengthening ranch leases from 5 years to 20 years, and authorizing killing and harassment of native tule elk. We submitted comment letters during the review process, and in fact the park received tens of thousands of comment letters from the public supporting tule elk, natural landscapes, and phasing out cattle grazing once and for all.

Records of Decision (RODs) commonly depart from the Final EIS by the agency writing the environmental review. Public comments are analyzed, and publically-available input from ranchers, conservation nonprofits, mountain bike groups, wildlife photographers, park enthusiasts, and all other commenters are responded to. This is how federal law is designed to work.

As a wildlife biologist and ecologist for Western Watersheds Project, I actually see the final plan for Point Reyes National Seashore as a win for livestock operators and a loss for native wildlife, healthy ecosystems, and public recreation. This decision continues and greatly expands commercial agriculture on a National Park Service unit, in addition to granting new uses such as farm stays, horse boarding, and on-site processing of agricultural products. This amounts to privatization of park resources, with which the majority of public comments did not agree. The vast majority of public comments asked for a thriving natural environment with native wildlife and more open recreational access--without the current 300 miles of barbed-wired fencing required for cattle pastures.

Rolph must admit that the ranchers used their own lobbyists in abundance, including rancher Kevin Lunny himself, who visited with former President Trump during the planning process.

The thousands of years of Coastal Miwok indigenous land management and Traditional Ecological Knowledge on the Point Reyes peninsula is not acknowledged by Rolph. Tribal cultural fire management kept these coastal prairies open and in a diverse mix of north coastal scrub, meadow, sand dune, and Bishop pine native plant communities in a healthy, resilient and truly sustainable mosaic of habitats to support wildlife for hundreds of generations before European settlement. Cold-water coastal creeks supported numerous runs of coho salmon and steelhead trout. Healthy clean water quality (free of mountains of cow manure) in springs and spring brooks supported rare amphibians such as red-legged frogs. Open beaches free of trampling cattle herds allowed imperiled snowy plovers to nest.

Lastly, Rolph accuses “pressure groups” of creating the impression there is a sudden crisis with tule elk at Point Reyes. There is. One of the most extreme droughts in the last century is happening now, with elk trapped behind an 8-foot-tall fence and unable to get the food and water they need to survive. Governor Gavin Newsom is threatening mandatory cutbacks in water use, and Marin County is going into emergency mode for residential water supplies. Even Point Reyes National Seashore dairies and beef ranches are feeling the impacts of the water crisis, and some are choosing to throw in the towel: Point Reyes National Seashore lessee Bob McClure decided recently to shut down his dairy operation due to drought impacts on water resources in the park.

Is this kind of damage from private livestock the kind of impact the National Park Service should permit?/George Wuerthner

On the national seashore, normally migratory elk, a free-roaming wildlife species, are confined to an area more like a zoo or wild animal park. Park visitors and wildlife photographers have been stunned to encounter the carcasses of dead elk as they become trapped in mud of drying former stock ponds in an area of meager springs. In fact, more than 100 tule elk have perished in the Tomales Elk Reserve during this drought, unnaturally. This is not “hands-off” elk management, when tule elk are trapped in a fenced area. The National Park Service needs to take down the artificial elk exclusion fence trapping these herds in a resource-poor arid zoo. Trapping the elk between a fence and the deep blue sea is an unnatural problem caused by agency mismanagement.

The lack of top predators in California is also a problem of the last 200 years' of human management, and should be righted. Allow elk predators such as wolves and mountain lions to repopulate the Golden State in wildlands, and access Point Reyes National Seashore. Wild wolves are penetrating deep into their original California ranges and could provide ecosystem benefits if we don’t shoot and trap them first.

Shockingly, hazing and shooting of native tule elk is part of the final decision, and anyone can see this. Ranchers took taxpayer funds decades ago to relocate out of the wondrous national seashore, which is plainly not suitable for industrial-scale commercial livestock operations that need to truck in tons of alfalfa hay and seed and harvest silage hay to feed over 5,000 cows on these public lands.

There are only approximately 5,700 tule elk in existence globally according to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, down from around 500,000 in the early 1800s. With millions of beef and dairy cattle on private ranches and lands in California, we feel the choice is clear for Point Reyes National Seashore management. Wildlife and natural landscapes should come first, and ranchers who agreed to take buy-outs should leave.

I agree with George Wuerthner when he reasonably observes, “If we can’t maintain a national park unit as a sanctuary for wild nature, where can we?”

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Comments

Sara, you should stop repeating falsehoods, such as, "the 20-year leases were promised by the former secretary of the Interior over 7 years ago."  "Promise" is false, and in fact, the Interior Secretary is not in a position, legally or ethically, to make such a promise.  What is Salazar promised Bounty Towels they could log Yosemite?  It doesn't mean anything.  Furthermore, that Secretary is no longer in office.

And you continue to insult all the concerned citizens who expressed just outrage at this awful plan.  Did it ever occur to you that the reason why the tens of thousands of comments echoed the environmental groups released content is because it is correct?  No, you prefer to call all these people "gullible," simply because they will not entertain your irresponsible, anachronistic and racist position.

Regarding "there was no requirement, or agreement, that they "relocate.""  As you know, there were Reservations of Use and Occupancy with finite terms, generally "not to exceed 25 years."  That's plain English - you are lying here.

Regarding "Point Reyes is simply not large enough for a free ranging herd of elk," What kind of nonsense is this?  There are two already and the park service indicates that if the elk fence is removed, the park will not reach carrying capacity for 25 years. 

Regarding stock ponds continue to support CA Red Legged Frogs, that's true.  But you don't need cattle to have ponds.  You are disingenuous here, again.

Regarding Snowy Plovers, if you don't know then shame on you.  Ranches attract ravens, and ravens prey on plover nests.  This is well known and acknowledged by the park.

Regarding, " The Center for Biological Diversity is a multi-million-dollar organization best known for its frivolous lawsuits and shakedowns," that's your ad hominem opinion.  There are 1.7 million members that seem to believe in the organization.

If these organizations are lying, as you claim, perhaps you could point out those lies, factually, rather than providing so many of your own.


y_p_w, Sarah is lying about the public comments.   There are a large number of short comments, like "don't shoot the elk, please!" etc.  But there are many more thoughtful and qualified letters opposing the plan than there are letters in support oif ranching in total.  They are posted on the PRNS website so you can read for yourself.  There are more letters asking for more bike lanes than there are letters in support of ranching.  And Sarah does not like to acknowledge the many letters sent outside the NEPA process to the NPS signed by over a hundred environmental groups, naturilists, guides, photographers, etc., nor does she care to mention the > 100k signatures delivereed to Secretary Haaland asking her to stop this plan, or the letter from the Coast Miwok Council calling the plan a traesty, etc., etc.  I find her desparate attempts to dismiss the clear public sentiment as shameful and embarrassing.


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