By Marita Noon June 30, 2014
I spent two days with a film crew from the For the Record
(FTR) television show that airs on Glenn Beck’s Blaze
TV.
A year ago, FTR did a show on border security. For the
“Borderless” episode, the crew met with ranchers in southern Arizona’s Cochise
County. After working with the ranchers there, when Nevada’s Bundy Ranch story
broke earlier this year, the producers knew there was more to the story. Why
would people from all over the West show up, en masse, to help defend a rancher
they’d never met, against the excessive force of the Bureau of Land Management?
For answers, the FTR crew reached out to the friends they’d made in Arizona,
who steered The Blaze team to Joe Delk New Mexico.
The team spent three days in New Mexico—June 23-25. I was
with them for two.
My
first day was spent in the blazing sun on Steve Wilmeth’s Butterfield Trail
Ranch. After an hour’s drive from Las Cruces, that included interstate highway,
dirt roads, and rocky cow trails, we gathered on a bluff overlooking arid land
dotted with cattle. The Organ Mountains, the subject of Tuesday’s shoot, could
be seen in the distance.
A
few weeks ago, I wrote
about the Organ Mountains-Desert Peaks National Monument. I cited numbers such
as the 600,000 acres the monument encompasses when the private property is
included; 1906 when the Antiquities Act—which allowed President Obama to sign
the national monument proclamation—became law; and 95—the number of families
who’d receive direct negative impacts from the designation. Now the numbers had
faces. I heard their stories. I saw the tears. I felt their pain.
What
surprised me the most was the vastness of the space. Even though we could
barely see the Organ Mountains, and we’d driven miles on a combination of
private and federal lands, this distant locale was still part of the
“monument.”
Many
of these ranchers’ families had cared for this land for generations—long before
the federal government claimed it. They had an “allotment”—meaning they owned
the right to graze their cattle on the, now, federal lands. Most ranches
contained a mix of private lands and allotments. Yet, with one stroke of a pen,
and talk of protecting a distant mountain, their property, their livelihood, is
threatened.
Each
rancher interviewed by FTR, had already seen friends give up and quit as a
result of the increasing federal regulations that made it harder and harder to
support their families and the families of the ranch hands—and harder and
harder to feed America the quality beef they raised on their lands. The new
National Monument designation was just one more layer that may be the last straw.
Though the final management plan for the monument will take years, each
impacted ranch faces uncertainty as to how it will be affected. But they know
the history, and they know it won’t be good.
Each
story was powerful. But, perhaps, the most compelling was that of Jim and Seth
Hyatt. The father and son work together on the ranch. Jim was interviewed
first. He told about the ranch history—the Hyatt family has ranched in the area
continuously since the 1890s—and about the joy of working with his son and
passing the ranch on. Next, came his son Seth, who shared how the ranch was in
his blood. His brother, he said, didn’t take to it. He lives in Dallas. Then
Haize, Seth’s two-year-old son—wearing cowboy boots and hat, and jeans held up
with a belt and a big silver buckle—climbed up into his dad’s lap. (When I
commented on Haize’s cowboy outfit, I was corrected: “That’s not a cowboy
outfit; that’s how he dresses every day.”) Seth turned somber when he told how
he’d like to teach ranching to his son, like his dad did for him, but now,
because of the monument designation, that was in doubt.
Wes
Eaton, was the youngest rancher. His family had ranched for most of his life on
the other side of the mountains in Carlsbad. A year ago, an opportunity came up
for him to manage a ranch. He jumped at the chance. However, a large portion of
the ranch falls within the monument designation. He doesn’t know whether or not
he’ll be able to continue to live his dream.
These
ranchers spent eight years going to meetings, providing public comment, doing
studies—anything they could to stave off the proposed monument; eight years
where they were distracted from their actual job of ranching. All for naught.
When
asked if they felt their government listened, the answer was universal. Not
only did they feel unheard, they were confident that the goal was to drive them
off the land.
Each
rancher interviewed on Tuesday faces imminent expulsion as a result the Organ
Mountains-Desert Peaks National Monument. On Wednesday, the villain was
different, but the end game was the same.
The
recording session started on Wednesday with Catron County Commissioners Glyn
Griffin and “Bucky” Allred. In Catron County, they don’t have a monument
designation, but ranchers in the region were being chased out by the
reintroduction of the Mexican grey wolf—which the Fish and Wildlife Service,
cooperating with environmental groups, insisted on bringing back to the region
despite the direct threat they pose to humans and livestock. Both commissioners
talked about the declining tax base in Catron County and how hard it was to
provide basic services to residents.
Griffin
talked about feeling as if he were fighting his own government. Allred said:
“Our towns are dying because of the federal governmental agencies and the gang
green organizations.” He continued: “I call them gang green because they are
like a poison, a death.”
Both
pointed out how listing the spotted owl, as an endangered species, had caused
economic devastation in Catron County. Logging was stopped and family sawmills
were shut down. Next, came the wolf reintroduction—promoted by the Center for
Biological Diversity—which has made ranching even harder.
Paul
Decker has spent his entire life in livestock, but he said: “It’s been
especially tough the past five years in Catron County since dealing with the
wolf issue.” Decker told The Blaze producers that the ranch he manages is
20,000 acres. In the past five years, they’ve lost 150-175 calves due to the wolves
that need ten pounds of meat a day to survive. In ranching, Decker explained,
there is one payday a year when the calves are sold for about $1000 each. If
the wolves kill 50 percent of your calves, you lose 50 percent of your pay. But
there’s more. Many cows have lost several calves. They fight off the wolves and
try to protect their babies, but the wolves win. Some cows are so emotionally
shattered by their babies being eaten by the wolves, they become stressed and
won’t breed. Ranchers who kill a wolf threatening their livestock on an
allotment, face huge fines and may go to jail.
If
a wolf attacks a calf on private land, it can be killed—but the rancher had
better hope that there is evidence. The calf needs to have teeth marks as proof
of the attempt. Even then, the family protecting their property faces months of
stressful investigation where they are assumed guilty until proven innocent.
One
couple told about shooting a wolf on their private property. They are required
to report the wolf’s presence to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS)
within 24 hours—but they called a lawyer first. Apparently, news of the
shooting was leaked from the FWS to the environmental group Defenders of
Wildlife. Threats from animal rights activists were posted online: “When I find
out who did this, I’m going to shoot his kids.”
Others
told about their children encountering wolves in their yards and at their
schools. Children waiting for the school bus in Catron County sit in a cage to
protect them from the wolves.
Once
the ranchers give up, wealthy people buy the property as a “retreat” or hobby
ranch that they visit a few times a year—further hurting the tax base.
Ranchers
in Catron County who are actually trying to earn a living, like those within
the Organ Mountains-Desert Peaks National Monument designation, feel that they
are being chased off the land; that environmental groups want to turn the
entire region into a “wilderness area”—without human beings. They feel bullied
by the U.S. Forest Service and the FWS, who are being driven by fear of lawsuit
from the environmental groups. They feel their government doesn’t listen,
doesn’t care.
It
turns out, what these ranchers are feeling is real. Environmental groups do
want them off the land—them and their cattle. The effort is called the Wildlands Network. The ranchers
are quick to point out how they protect the land and how the deer and the elk
are present because of the water and infrastructure they put in place for the
livestock. “If you don’t take care of the land, the land won’t take care of
you,” was a frequently heard sentiment.
Jerry
Schickedanz, Dean Emeritus of the College of Agriculture and Home Economics at
New Mexico State University, told me: “The environmental groups subscribe to
the idea that natural ecosystems are superior to human altered ones. Anything
man has been involved in is considered to be degraded and they have pushed the
idea that human alteration is a bad thing—all humans, and evidence of humans,
must be removed. I see this ideology as the underpinning of the Wildlands
Network.”
Is
there any hope for these ranchers? Are they destined to be bullied by the
federal agencies and the environmental groups or can they continue to ranch the
lands of their forefathers? Stories like those I heard along with The Blaze
team are what prompted the level of outrage at government overreach expressed
at the Bundy Ranch in Nevada. It wasn’t about Bundy; it was about bullying.
Allred
believes they must fight for the transfer of
federal lands to the states as was originally planned by the
Enabling Act. He shook his head as he sighed: “We’ve become the weakest
generation.”
Last
week, I, too, would have sighed. But that was before the Supreme Court shot
down the Obama Administration for its overreach. Perhaps House Speaker John
Boehner can include these land abuses in his lawsuit
against the Administration for its abuses of executive power. We can
hope the Supreme Court would hand down its decision before the good folks I met
are chased from their family ranches.
The
author of Energy Freedom,
Marita Noon serves as the executive director for Energy Makes America Great Inc.
and the companion educational organization, the Citizens’ Alliance for Responsible Energy
(CARE). Together they work to educate the public and influence policy makers regarding
energy, its role in freedom, and the American way of life. Combining energy,
news, politics, and, the environment through public events, speaking
engagements, and media, the organizations’ combined efforts serve as America’s
voice for energy.
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