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NEWS RELEASE
For
Immediate Release
June 5, 2006
Contacts:
Mark Salvo, Director, Sagebrush Sea Campaign · (503)
757-4221
Jacob Smith, Executive Director, Center for Native Ecosystems
· (303) 546-0214
Carol Goldberg, PEER · (202) 265-7337
Amy Atwood, Western Environmental Law Center ·
(541) 914-8372
San
Miguel County Joins Coalition Seeking Gunnison Sage-Grouse Protection
TELLURIDE, COLO. - San Miguel County
in Colorado has formally joined an effort to protect the Gunnison sage-grouse
under the federal Endangered Species Act. The County's action is in response
to a decision six weeks ago by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to eliminate
protections for the Gunnison sage-grouse and remove it from consideration
as a "threatened" or "endangered" wildlife species.
The county joins a growing coalition of local and national conservation
groups who have warned the agency that it must reverse its illegal decision
or face litigation.
The San Miguel County Board of Commissioners voted
unanimously last week to join a formal "notice of intent to sue"
the federal government. "It's great to see the county insisting that
the Gunnison sage-grouse be protected under the Endangered Species Act,"
said Mark Salvo, Director of the Sagebrush Sea Campaign.
The letter formally indicates that the coalition
may file a lawsuit against the Fish and Wildlife Service after 60 days
to challenge the agency's illegal removal of the grouse from the Endangered
Species Act "candidate" species list and its refusal to protect
the grouse under the Act. While its historic range included parts of Colorado,
Utah, New Mexico, Arizona, the species now occurs only in eight small
populations in southwestern Colorado and southeastern Utah. Gunnison sage-grouse
have experienced significant declines in recent years with fewer than
4,000 breeding individuals remaining.
"The Gunnison sage-grouse is an imperiled
species," said Nicole Rosmarino, Conservation Director of Forest
Guardians. "And none of the threats to the grouse have gone away
with the government's decision."
Livestock grazing, oil and gas drilling, motorized
recreation, and urbanization threaten the continued existence of Gunnison
sage-grouse. Severe drought in recent years has exacerbated the effects
of these human impacts. West Nile virus, a disease that is fatal to greater
sage-grouse, has also been discovered in Gunnison sage-grouse range.
"The government's own scientists were suppressed
in this matter by political appointees within the Department of Interior,"
stated Jeff Ruch, Executive Director of Public Employees for Environmental
Responsibility (PEER), which has also now joined the coalition. "These
political appointees ignored the government's own scientific findings."
By refusing to protect Gunnison sage-grouse as
threatened or endangered now, and without some level of accountability
in land management, grouse numbers are likely to continue to decline,
probably resulting in listing as "endangered" rather than "threatened"
under the Endangered Species Act and severely curtailing the considerable
flexibility a threatened listing would provide public land management
agencies and landowners.
"We prefer that these issues be resolved
cooperatively but when the federal government so egregiously breaks the
law, local governments and community groups have no other choice but to
go to court," said Jacob Smith, Executive Director of the Center
for Native Ecosystems.
"The federal government is on notice
that a broad coalition of stakeholders will hold it accountable for its
decision," said Amy Atwood of the Western Environmental Law Center,
which is representing San Miguel County, the Sagebrush Sea Campaign, Center
for Biological Diversity, Center for Native Ecosystems, Forest Guardians,
The Larch Company, PEER and Sinapu in the litigation. "Those who
care about the Gunnison sage-grouse have no choice but to challenge this
indefensible and unlawful decision in court."
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Read the Notice of Intent to Sue: www.sagebrushsea.org/pdf/Gunnison_Grouse_Supp_NOI.pdf
See a National Audubon Society report identifying Gunnison sage-grouse
as one of America's top ten most endangered birds: www.audubon.org/news/top10/top10.php.
A photograph of Gunnison sage-grouse by Louis Swift is available on
the Audubon Society website at www.audubon.org/news/top10/download.php.
Additional information on Gunnison sage-grouse is available on the Sagebrush
Sea Campaign website at www.sagebrushsea.org/sp_gunnison_grouse.htm.
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