Hammonds may face competition for grazing allotments
Published 4:54 pm Tuesday, March 31, 2020
- Grazing allotments in southeast Oregon traditionally used by Hammond Ranches are undergoing an extensive environmental review. The federal government has urged a judge to dismiss a lawsuit against grazing on those allotments. Environmental groups disagree want the lawsuit to continue.
Neighboring cattle producers can apply to compete for access to federal grazing allotments that Oregon’s Hammond Ranches lost in a court decision last year.
However, those applications will be put on hold if Hammond Ranches decides to continue with an administrative challenge against the U.S. Bureau of Land Management.
Ranchers have until April 14 to apply to graze livestock on the four allotments, which include more than 26,000 federal acres, while Hammond Ranches must decide by that time whether to pursue its appeal — or also submit an application for a new grazing permit.
Steven Hammond, co-owner of the ranch, said he’s not sure whether other cattlemen will seek to compete for the grazing allotments, which his family has relied upon for decades.
Hammond said he’s also undecided about which procedural action to take and will be consulting with his attorney to “try to understand how much more complicated this process is going to get.”
Hammond and his father, Dwight,
were convicted of arson for setting fire to rangelands and sent to prison in 2012. After being released, they were ordered back behind bars when the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals determined they must both serve mandatory 5-year sentences.
Demonstrations against the federal government erupted when the Hammonds returned to prison in early 2016, leading to the occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge. One protester was killed and multiple others were arrested while on a trip away from the facility.
President Donald Trump fully pardoned the father and son in 2018 and the BLM restored their access to federal grazing allotments last year.
However, that decision was overturned by a judge due to a lawsuit in which several environmental groups opposed the restoration of their grazing permits.
Because their grazing permits were again canceled, it also effectively re-started an administrative appeal the Hammonds had previously been pursuing to regain access to the allotments. If the Hammonds continue with their administrative challenge, the BLM will wait until it’s resolved before making a decision on the applications.
The Oregon Cattlemen’s Association is “fully supportive” of the Hammond family and would prefer that other cattlemen not compete for the grazing allotments, said Jerome Rosa, the group’s executive director.
“We really hope people will allow the Hammonds to get their permits back,” Rosa said.