Nevada Ranchers Rally Against Federal Land Policy
About 70 cattlemen and ranchers, half on horseback, rallied at the steps of Nevada's state Capitol to protest against federal control of grazing lands. They complained about the cuts in the number of cattle allowed to graze this year due to drought conditions.
Ranchers Seek State Intervention
The ranchers are seeking the help of Republican Governor Brian Sandoval to remove a regional Bureau of Land Management (BLM) official. This official's office in northern Nevada has reduced cattle grazing by 20 percent over the next 12 months in the Battle Mountain region, citing lingering drought.
The protest follows a five-day, 320-mile ride across northern Nevada rangelands led by a county commissioner disgruntled with the BLM. This comes amid growing discontent about federal control of public lands in the U.S. West.
"Across the board I would like to see the land transferred to the state of Nevada," said Elko County Commissioner Grant Gerber, whose family began ranching in eastern Nevada in the mid-1800s. "Then people closer to the issue could make the decisions."
BLM's Response to Drought
The BLM stated that the 20 percent reduction in cattle allotments in the Battle Mountain area was negotiated with grazing permit holders and county commissioners over several months due to drought.
"These conditions have stressed all resources on the public lands, making grazing throughout most of Nevada unsustainable at permitted levels," the agency said in a statement.
Gerber, an attorney who has represented ranchers in disputes with the BLM for three decades, said the reductions threaten the livelihoods of ranching families. They felt forced to accept the reductions to avoid bigger threatened cuts.
The Grass March
Gerber said the multiday horseback protest, dubbed the "Grass March," was modeled after Gandhi's "Salt March" across India to protest British control of the salt supply in 1930. He likened it to BLM control of Nevada's public lands.
The ride is the latest demonstration against federal control of public land since a highly publicized April standoff between armed backers of rancher Cliven Bundy and federal authorities who sought to seize his herd over Bundy's failure to pay grazing fees or remove his cattle from public land outside of Las Vegas.
The following month, all-terrain vehicle enthusiasts in Utah held an illegal ride on a canyon trail protesting the BLM's closure of that area to motorized vehicles.
Petition for Change
As of Friday, about 1,000 Nevadans had signed Gerber's petition seeking the removal of BLM District Manager Douglas Furtado, a copy of which was given to Sandoval during a brief meeting.
BLM spokeswoman Erica Haspiel-Szlosek said the agency had no comment on the rancher's petition. Sandoval spokesman Tyler Klimas urged cooperation on land issues in a state where over 80 percent of public land is federally controlled.
Originally Posted By Reuters