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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Judge undoes Idaho deal with sheep rancher

John Miller Associated Press

BOISE – A federal judge has ordered a western Idaho rancher to keep his sheep off his family’s traditional grazing ground on public land to protect wild native bighorns.

U.S. District Judge Lynn Winmill ruled last week that a pact between a Salmon River rancher and the state to keep his domestic herd separate from bighorns on a Bureau of Land Management allotment fell short of a 2009 law aimed at helping Idaho’s ranching industry and protecting the native wild sheep.

The Wilderness Society, Western Watersheds Project and Hells Canyon Preservation Council had all contended that a bighorn herd near Riggins was in danger of catching deadly diseases if the allotment near Partridge Creek opened to domestic herds on schedule Thursday.

The number of Idaho bighorns has dwindled by half since 1990 to about 3,500 after several mass die-offs. Wildlife managers believe bighorns can catch diseases such as pneumonia when they come into contact with domestic sheep. Winmill said he was trying to prevent more outbreaks.

“Irreversible damage is possible here,” Winmill wrote in his 17-page ruling. “Bighorns could become infected and roam far up-river in the Salmon River drainage, infecting the other native bighorns along the way, causing large-scale losses.”

This year, Idaho lawmakers passed a plan requiring the state Department of Fish and Game director to certify that the risk of disease transmission between bighorn and domestic sheep was “acceptable for the viability of the bighorn sheep” once ranchers and the state had crafted Best Management Practices, or BMPs, to keep the two species apart.

The state and rancher Mick Carlson, whose family has grazed the Partridge Creek allotment since 1937, negotiated such an agreement in August. Among other things, he agreed to have two herders, three guard dogs and three herding dogs with each band of sheep. He was also allowed to kill bighorns that wandered into his herd.

In his ruling Winmill said that agreement relied on voluntary compliance and could not be enforced by the Bureau of Land Management.

“The director here certified that the risk has been reduced to an acceptable level,” the judge wrote. “Acceptable to who? Acceptable under what standard? These questions are not answered.”

The BLM on Monday said it would live by the judge’s order until it had a chance to do a new environmental analysis on the effects of grazing at Partridge Creek on wild bighorns.