Good news for off-roaders
The government lifts a ban, saying they pose no threat to the desert tortoise living in thousands of acres of desert washes
11:50 PM PST on Friday, April 1, 2005
By JENNIFER BOWLES / The Press-Enterprise
The U.S. Bureau of Land Management on Friday lifted a three-month ban on off-roading across 571,000 acres of desert washes in Riverside and San Bernardino counties.
A federal judge ordered the ban in early January after the Center for Biological Diversity and other environmental groups argued that vehicles damage the habitat of the desert tortoise and can kick up dust and kill the threatened reptiles. The particular washes, they said, are inside areas specifically designed to protect the tortoises that mate, forage and burrow into the sides.
"To turn them into off-road open areas is a huge mistake, and we don't think it's going to stand up in court," said Daniel Patterson of the Center.
The BLM made its announcement after the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service cleared the move, saying the vehicles would not likely jeopardize the continued existence of the tortoise or its habitat, said Tony Staed, a BLM spokesman.
Cindy Kennedy, an off-roader who lives in Beaumont, said keeping the washes closed would have posed a safety threat for off-roaders.
"When you lose that large amount of land it makes it more dangerous because there's less land for everyone to ride on," she said.
The washes, she said, are wide enough to avoid the reptiles although she's never come across one in 30 years of riding.
The federal wildlife agency, while conceding that off-roading poses the greatest risk to tortoises, said it anticipates that few tortoises would be killed or injured because of their low population in washes.
In its report, the agency also noted the BLM had already taken steps to reduce other threats to the tortoise, including reducing the number of cattle that graze in the reptile's habitat, out-competing them for food and stomping on young tortoises.
The government lifts a ban, saying they pose no threat to the desert tortoise living in thousands of acres of desert washes
11:50 PM PST on Friday, April 1, 2005
By JENNIFER BOWLES / The Press-Enterprise
The U.S. Bureau of Land Management on Friday lifted a three-month ban on off-roading across 571,000 acres of desert washes in Riverside and San Bernardino counties.
A federal judge ordered the ban in early January after the Center for Biological Diversity and other environmental groups argued that vehicles damage the habitat of the desert tortoise and can kick up dust and kill the threatened reptiles. The particular washes, they said, are inside areas specifically designed to protect the tortoises that mate, forage and burrow into the sides.
"To turn them into off-road open areas is a huge mistake, and we don't think it's going to stand up in court," said Daniel Patterson of the Center.
The BLM made its announcement after the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service cleared the move, saying the vehicles would not likely jeopardize the continued existence of the tortoise or its habitat, said Tony Staed, a BLM spokesman.
Cindy Kennedy, an off-roader who lives in Beaumont, said keeping the washes closed would have posed a safety threat for off-roaders.
"When you lose that large amount of land it makes it more dangerous because there's less land for everyone to ride on," she said.
The washes, she said, are wide enough to avoid the reptiles although she's never come across one in 30 years of riding.
The federal wildlife agency, while conceding that off-roading poses the greatest risk to tortoises, said it anticipates that few tortoises would be killed or injured because of their low population in washes.
In its report, the agency also noted the BLM had already taken steps to reduce other threats to the tortoise, including reducing the number of cattle that graze in the reptile's habitat, out-competing them for food and stomping on young tortoises.
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