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|
Board of Directors |
| Kelley Weston |
President |
| Dr. Erin Anchustegui |
Vice President |
| Louise Wagenknecht |
Secretary-Treasurer |
| Dr. Bruce Hayse |
Director |
| Dr. Ralph Maughan |
Director |
| Dr. John Carter
|
Director |
| James Gillespie |
Director |
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| |
| |
|
Advisory Board |
| Gene E.
Bray |
| Debra
L. Donahue |
|
Brian Ertz |
|
Martin Flannes |
|
Dr. Don Johnson |
|
Louise Lasley |
|
Stan Moore |
| Dr.
Elizabeth Painter |
| Dr. Tom
Pringle |
|
Todd Shuman |
|
Larry Walker |
| George
Wuerthner |
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| |
| |
|
Staff |
|
Jon Marvel |
Executive Director |
|
Jeremy Greenberg |
Office
Administrator |
|
Katie Fite |
Biodiversity Director |
|
Greta Anderson |
Arizona Director |
| Erik Ryberg |
Arizona Legal Counsel |
|
Dr. Michael J. Connor |
California Director |
|
Dr. John Carter
|
Utah
Director |
|
Julian Hatch |
Southern
Utah Coordinator |
|
Jonathan Ratner |
Wyoming Director |
|
Sean Sheehan |
Northern Wyoming Field Director |
|
Larry Walker |
RangeNet Director |
|
Stuart Murray |
Contract Public Lands Monitor |
|
Larry Zuckerman |
Central Idaho Director |
|
Debra Ellers |
Western Idaho Director |
|
Dale Grooms |
Western Idaho Data Specialist |
|
Brian Ertz |
Media Director |
|
Jen Nordstrom |
Contract NEPA Comments |
|
Rick Hobson |
Wolf Advocacy Coordinator |
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Mission and Partnerships
The mission of Western Watersheds
Project is to protect and restore western watersheds and wildlife through
education, public policy initiatives and litigation.
Western Watersheds Project is a
non-profit conservation group founded in 1993 with 1600 members and with field offices in Idaho,
Utah, Wyoming, Arizona and California. WWP’s headquarters is located in Hailey, Idaho and the group works
to influence and improve public lands management in 8 western states with a primary focus on the
negative impacts of livestock grazing on 250,000,000 acres of western public lands. WWP has an
annual budget in 2007 of $650,000.
WWP works in partnership with the Oregon Natural Desert Association in Oregon, Forest Guardians in New Mexico, the Center for Biological Diversity in Arizona, the American Lands Alliance in Washington, D.C; and the Larch Company in Ashland, Oregon. With these groups WWP co-founded the National Public Lands Grazing Campaign that supports federal legislation for a generous and voluntary federal grazing permit buyout program to compensate ranchers and restore public lands. Congressman Raul Grijalva of Arizona sponsors that legislation.
WWP’s long-term partner in our efforts to bring the Bureau of Land Management and the Forest Service into compliance with national environmental laws is the non-profit environmental law firm Advocates For The West in Boise, Idaho.
Restoration:
WWP manages the 432-acre the Greenfire Preserve on the East Fork of the Salmon River in Central Idaho. The Preserve incorporates more than 1.25 miles of the East Fork, which provides critical habitat for Chinook salmon, steelhead and bull trout all listed under the Endangered Species Act. The preserve also provides winter habitat for 150 elk, over 2000 whitetail and mule deer, wolves and the remnant White Cloud herd of Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep. The Preserve also provides year-round habitat for a wild horse band of sixteen horses.
Since WWP began management of the property, more than 50,000 acres of public-lands grazing allotments associated with the Preserve have been closed to livestock grazing. Peregrine falcons, bobcats, spotted bats and wolf packs have replaced cattle.
WWP’s management program for Greenfire includes an extensive restoration project funded in part by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
In 1993 WWP pioneered competitive bidding for grazing leases on Idaho state school endowment land and continues a program of competing for high conservation value school endowment land grazing leases in three states. That effort resulted in April 1999 in WWP winning three unanimous decisions at the Idaho Supreme Court in one day including the first reversal of an Idaho Constitutional amendment in more than 65 years.
At this time WWP holds over 4000 acres of these school endowment land leaseholds that are being managed for wildlife habitat and conservation purposes.
Through vigorous litigation under the Endangered Species Act, Clean Water Act and Federal Land Policy Management Act, WWP has successfully challenged public-lands grazing practices that threaten watersheds and endangered species such as salmon, steelhead and bull trout.
In August 2005 WWP won an unprecedented federal court injunction ruling removing livestock from more than 800,000 acres of BLM managed lands in south-central Idaho because of violations of federal law.
WWP and other groups also recently stopped the U.S. Department of Agriculture from carrying out an unscientific, inhumane plan to kill coyotes, foxes, ravens, badgers and other native predators on 35 million acres in southern Idaho.
In June 2007 WWP won an impressive federal court victory with the overturning of the Bush Administration’s grazing regulations for the Bureau of Land Management. This win beneficially affects over 160,000,000 acres of public lands in eleven states.
Field Monitoring:
WWP regularly employs field monitors to identify damaged watersheds and document abusive
land-management practices. Monitors report livestock numbers on grazing
allotments, turnout times, overgrazing, degradation of streams and streambanks,
destruction of riparian and upland habitat and illegal diversions of water.
WWP is one of six steering committee groups in the
NPLGC, a progressive plan to end abusive livestock grazing on America’s public
lands and compensate public-lands ranchers in the process. More than 120
conservation groups, including the Sierra Club, endorse the proposal. See http://www.publiclandsranching.org for more information about the NPLGC.
Western Watersheds Project has
been very successful in bringing its conservation campaign to the attention of
national press and policymakers. In the last five years more than 450 news
stories have appeared about the work of WWP. |