Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Sage grouse listing
would destroy industry
Herald and News Letter
to the Editor January 20, 2012, by Gail Whitsett, Klamath
Falls
News from the Department
of Interior regarding the determination for sage grouse
listing and habitat designation for the Western United
States could portend the end of public range grazing.
Multi-millions of public acres in 10 states, including
Oregon, may become useless if the potential ESA-listed sage
grouse habitat is determined to be impacted by the influence
of controlled cattle grazing. Banning livestock grazing will
result in less tax revenue and thousands fewer jobs for the
American public.
Cattle remain Klamath
and Lake counties’ largest agricultural commodity. Many
Oregon counties are dependent upon cattle
production to keep their
local economies solvent. The Oregon Department of
Agriculture lists cattle, including dairy, as the largest
state agricultural industry.
A huge demand for beef
products exists in the Pacific Rim countries. Meeting this
demand is an opportunity to help lift Oregon out of the
recession. This federal ruling potentially banning cattle
from millions of acres of grazing land in Eastern Oregon
will destroy that possibility. We can look to Australia,
Argentina or Brazil to step in and provide the animals for
this market that should otherwise belong to the Oregon and
U.S. cattle producer.
Pacific Legal Foundation
attorney Karen Budd-Falen stated in a recent Congressional
hearing “Contrary to some belief, the implementation of the
ESA has real impacts on landowners, ranchers, farmers,
employers and others who are a vital part of America’s
present and future. Rather than saving species, and
conserving their habitats, the ESA is used as a sword to
tear down the American economy, drive up food, energy and
housing costs and wear down and take out rural communities
and counties.”
Sage grouse listing will
do to Oregon agriculture what the spotted owl did to the
timber industry and the fisheries biological opinions have
done to the Klamath Basin’s economy.
Editor’s’s note: Gail
Whitsett is a candidate for state representative from
District 56.
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