We have great news to share! Thanks to our advocacy and legal action, an administrative judge has halted a Bureau of Land Management (BLM) project that would have bulldozed 13 reservoirs to redistribute cattle within Bears Ears National Monument.
This decision is a critical win for the fragile desert ecosystem of Bears Ears. Western Watersheds Project (WWP) challenged the project, arguing that the BLM failed to conduct a thorough environmental analysis before approving actions that could cause irreversible harm. Sage Steppe Wild filed a separate appeal of the same decision. The judge agreed, ruling that the project posed "immediate and irreparable impacts" to the monument’s lands.
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Photo by volunteer with Great Old Broads for Wilderness. |
The BLM’s plan aimed to spread livestock across previously ungrazed areas, in an allotment leased by The Nature Conservancy, by bulldozing 13 new water reservoirs and adding miles of additional barbed-wire fencing. But this approach ignores well-documented science: Cattle concentrate around water sources, damaging vegetation, compacting fragile biological soil crusts, and accelerating desertification.
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