Park Service News Release about CUT Deal
Buffaloed on Apr 17th 2008
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
Yellowstone National Park
P.O. Box 168
Yellowstone National Park, WY 82190
EMBARGOED UNTIL 1:30 PM MDT
April 17, 2008 08-024
Al Nash or Stacy Vallie (307) 344-2015
—————————————————-
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK NEWS RELEASE
—————————————————-
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE HELPS FUND GRAZING RESTRICTION AND BISON ACCESS
AGREEMENT
Deal increases tolerance for bison north of park by removing cattle for 30
years
(Bozeman, MT) - The National Park Service has agreed to provide federal
funds in support of a grazing rights and bison access agreement which will
allow the Interagency Bison Management Plan (IBMP) to move forward. The
deal was announced in Bozeman this afternoon by Yellowstone National Park
Superintendent Suzanne Lewis, Church Universal and Triumphant, Inc.,
President Kate Gordon, and Montana Governor Brian Schweitzer.
Under the IBMP, the park works with other agencies to conserve a viable,
wild bison population while cooperating to protect Montana’s
brucellosis-free status. That means keeping bison separated from cattle
present on land outside the park.
The State of Montana and the Church Universal and Triumphant have reached
an agreement which removes cattle from the Royal Teton Ranch (RTR) for a
period of 30 years. It would allow some bison to move onto and across RTR
property and onto national forest lands covered under Step 2 of the IBMP.
Step 2 of the IBMP allows an increasing number of sero-negative bison on
land between the northern boundary of Yellowstone National Park and Yankee
Jim Canyon, at the southern end of the Paradise Valley.
Under a cooperative agreement, the National Park Service will give the
State of Montana $1.5 million to help fund the federal portion of the
agreement. The balance of the funds will be provided by the State of
Montana and its partners.
Because of significant bison movement across the park’s northern boundary
this year, the Church removed all cattle from the RTR Monday morning to
reduce the risk of transmission of brucellosis from bison to cattle.
Removal of cattle from RTR property adjacent to Yellowstone National Park
was called for in Step Two of the IBMP, to provide increased tolerance for
bison outside the park’s northern boundary. The need to complete this
agreement was reinforced in the recent Government Accountability Office
report on bison management.
This is the eighth winter the IBMP has been used to guide brucellosis risk
management actions. Nearly 1,300 bison have been shipped to slaughter
from the Stephens Creek bison capture facility on the park’s northern
boundary this year as part of brucellosis risk management actions under the
IBMP.
The five cooperating agencies operating under the IBMP are the National
Park Service, the U.S. Forest Service, the USDA Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service, the Montana Department of Livestock and the Montana
Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks.
- www.nps.gov/yell -
,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.
,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,
Public Affairs Office
Yellowstone National Park, WY 82190
(307) 344-2013
Yell_Public_Affairs@nps.gov
www.nps.gov/yell
Filed in Brucellosis, Buffalo, Church Universal and Triumphant (CUT), National Park Service, Politicians, Yellowstone Buffalo | No responses yet