Re: California Rangeland Conservation Coalition
e-update
US Fish
and Wildlife Service Seeks Input on Proposed
Easement Program
Input by Dr. John
Menke June 2011
Dr. John
Menke biography
USFWS is a
corrupt organization seeking to terminate private
property. They have locked up the forest such that
ingrowth of
white fir and incense cedar is disallowing access
for the owl to its prey base in interior dry mixed
conifer forest from Shasta Lake to
Roseburg,
OR--too many trees per acre and too many canopy
layers vertically--these are big birds and they have
to fly to capture their food. The fire hazard is
immense and getting worse. The unintended
consequences for the owl are worse than the reason
for 'protection' of the owl in the first place.
USFWS seeks
control, and once it gets it, it uses corrupt means
to keep control--no different than communist
dictators except thus far they have not resorted to
killing humans directly, but indirectly they are
killing many humans by the stress they are placing
on rural populations of the US.
Typical
FWS
employees are under skilled for the ecosystems they
affect.
This working landscape
jargon is sick. Let's face it, all ranchers are
realtors in
the future if their children do not wish to ranch.
That is their choice, not the governments.
I used to believe in
the California Rangeland Trust efforts of folks like
Nita Vail. I worked for her Father and Uncle for
many years keeping the National Park Service from
cheating them on their estate rights on Santa Rosa
Island. I also used to fund my graduate students in
cooperation with
TNC. Now they have become the wedge coercing
landowners into government ownership of more of
their land--reverse mortgaging their future choices.
Have you read the
Constitution--the government is only authorized to
own 10 square miles in Washington DC; this business
of getting so much land transferred to institutions
without any production motive is sick.
Renewable natural
resources are the only basis for wealth creation for
a nation. Service industries only make wealth on the
margin of others' cost. Follow the money--the
NGOs
are only in this for their own gain. Somehow you
folks think you are God's last hope for saving the
Earth!
Without work their is
no self esteem creation. And without self esteem,
drugs and perverted behavior is the pastime activity
of the sick people that are becoming far too common
in American society. That leads to nothing but a
blighted landscape.
This Rangeland
Coalition has become a vehicle of corruption itself.
I only went to one meeting in Chico--had a great
time seeing old friends/colleagues--but on
reflection and now seeing this foothill legacy
program, I cannot believe my eyes!
From: CA Rangeland Coalition <palvarez@defenders.org>
To: jmenke@ymail.com
Sent: Friday, July 1, 2011 10:44 PM
Subject: California Rangeland
Conservation Coalition e-update
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July 1, 2011 e-update
US Fish and
Wildlife Service
Seeks Input on
Proposed Easement
Program –
The U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service
(Service) has
initiated the
planning process for
a proposed
California Foothills
Legacy Area (CFLA).
CFLA
is a proposed new
easement program to
protect working
landscapes and is
focused on
rangelands
surrounding
California’s Central
Valley. Currently
land trust
throughout
California,
including Rangeland
Coalition partner,
the California
Rangeland Trust,
have a backlog of
ranchers seeking a
conservation
easement on their
working ranches. The
Service has
identified four
preliminary focal
areas including the
following counties:
Calaveras,
Fresno, Kern,
Madera,
Mariposa,
Merced,
San Benito, Shasta,
Stanislaus,
Tehama,
Tulare
and
Tuolumne.
USFWS
believes that
establishing the
CFLA,
in cooperation with
landowners, will
make a significant
contribution to
conserving
California’s
privately-owned
rangelands.
For more information
please contact Tracy
Schohr
at
tschohr@calcattlemen.org.
To send comments
send an email to
fw8plancomments@fws.gov.
For more information
click here
Cattle Grazing
Mountain Meadows and
Yosemite Toads
(source
UC
Davis) – A
research study
conducted by
scientists from
UC
Davis,
UC
Berkeley and the US
Forest Service shows
evidence that
livestock grazing is
not a
contributing to
the steep decline of
Yosemite toads and
their habitat. The
research team had
hypothesized that a
reduction in grazing
intensity would stop
or even reverse the
decline of the
Yosemite toad but
they found no
evidence to support
that hypothesis.
Results from the
study will impact
ranchers whose
grazing allotments
were restricted by
the U.S. Forest
Service in 2001
based on the
assumption that
grazing is
contributing to the
toads’ decline.
Forest Service
officials will use
the study to develop
plans that allow
grazing within
appropriate
standards while
conserving toads. A
complete report is
available
online
at:
http://carangeland.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2211480a37f6ce84054176989&id=c9b834185b&e=fb0c9ea391
under the section
titled Cattle
Grazing, Mountain
Meadows, and
Sensitive Species.
Rangelands
Provide Valuable
Pollination Services
to California
Agriculture
(source
UC
Berkeley) – A
study from
UC
Berkeley researchers
published this week
in the June issue of
the journal
Rangelands
shows that
California
agriculture reaps
$937 million to $2.4
billion per year in
economic value from
wild, free-living
bee species that
serve the critical
function of
pollinating crops.
The new study also
found that wild
pollinators residing
in California’s
rangelands,
provide 35-39
percent, or more
than one-third, of
all pollination
“services” to the
state’s crops. “This
means that
preserving
rangelands
has significant
economic value, not
only to the ranchers
who graze their
cattle there, but
also to farmers who
need the
pollinators,” said
Claire
Kremen,
UC
Berkeley associate
professor of
environmental
science, policy and
management, and
senior author of the
study. The study is
the first to
calculate the
percentage of crop
pollinators that are
wild, free-living
species based on
their proximity to
natural habitats,
and thus to identify
the economic value
of the pollination
service due to wild
pollinators.
For more information
click here
San Benito & Santa
Clara County Local
Working Group
Meeting – July 6,
Hollister,
Calif. The local
working group
meeting will be held
with agencies and
community members to
discuss needs and
opportunities in the
2 counties. Based on
feedback from the
Local Working Group
meeting the
Hollister
NRCS
office will evaluate
priorities for
funding and discuss
ways to improve the
on the amount of
funding for certain
practices. For more
information contact
Athena Pratt at
athena.pratt@ca.usda.gov;
phone (831) 637-4360
x110.Quivira
Coalition 10th
Anniversary
Conference : New
Agrarians: How the
Next Generation of
Leaders Tackle 21st
Century Challenges –
November 8 –10, 2011
Albuquerque, New
Mexico The
Conference will
feature a well-known
and diverse group of
authors, experts,
and practitioners,
young agrarian
leaders working hard
to successfully meet
the challenges of
the 21st century.
Plenary sessions
will feature a
diverse array of
agrarians covering
topics related to
ranching, farming
and conservation. An
all-day workshop,
November 8,
"Managing
Rangelands
for Success in the
21st Century,"
will be lead by Jim
Gerrish
from American
Grazing Lands
Services
LLC of
May, Idaho. A
natural educator,
Jim has helped
farmers and ranchers
across the nation
more effectively
manage their grazing
lands for economic
and environmental
sustainability.
Online
registration opens
July 1.
For updated
conference
information click
here.
Clarence Burch Award
Seeking Nominations–.
This $20,000 award
recognizes
individuals or
organizations who
lead by example in
promoting and
accomplishing
outstanding
stewardship of
private and/or
public lands that
are consistent with
the mission of the
Quivira
Coalition. The 10th
Annual Burch Award
will be presented at
a dinner ceremony at
the conclusion of
the
Quivira
Coalition's 10th
Anniversary
Conference.
Nomination Deadline
August 10,
2011.Click
here for more
information and
nomination
guidelines.Walnut
Residents Want
Cattle Back – An
article in the
Contra Costa times
features the story
of a group of Walnut
Creek residents
determined to bring
cattle grazing back
to the
Acalanes
Ridge Open Space to
control weeds and
reduce fire risk.
To access the
article click here.
New Partners –
The Coalition keeps
attracting new
partners. This week
the Point Reyes Bird
Observatory signed
on to the California
Rangeland
Resolution.
For an updated list
of partners click
here.
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