Ranchers pay just $1.35 a month to graze cattle on public lands and national forests. You couldn’t feed a cat or dog for 10 times that amount.
Cattle grazing on public lands by Greg Shine/BLM
What animal could survive on $1.35 worth of food a month?
Certainly not your average housecat, which can eat up to $45 worth of food
every 30 days.
So why, then, do cattle and other livestock in the U.S. get to graze on
public lands for a month at a time for roughly the price of two cans of
Fancy Feast?
The shocking thing is, ranchers now pay even less than they used to.
Earlier this year the Trump administration lowered the monthly fee for
grazing on public lands and national forests from $1.41 to $1.35—the lowest
price allowed by law.
The fee covers one “animal month”—30 days of grazing—for each cow, or cow
with calf. The same fee applies for every five sheep or goats.
These grazing fees—collected by the Bureau of Land Management—brought in
only$16 million in 2018 (before the monthly fee was lowered). That sum
doesn’t even cover the costs to administer the program or the environmental
degradation caused by livestock grazing on public lands.
“BLM’s own records reveal that much of the sagebrush West is in severely
degraded condition due to excessive commercial livestock grazing,” Kirsten
Stade, advocacy director for Public Employees for Environmental
Responsibility, said in a press release when the new fees were announced.
“Lowering already ultra-low grazing fees only encourages more abuse of
public rangelands.”
How many livestock animals are we talking about? That’s hard to say. Last
year the website The Daily Pitchfork calculated that about 1.9 million
“cattle equivalents” (a number that represents multiple types and ages of
livestock) feed on public lands. Those numbers are hard to verify because
BLM has since moved or removed all of the files that were used to compile
the Daily Pitchfork’s reports, as well as related government reports from
the Congressional Research Service.
The numbers also do not include so-called “trespass ranchers” like Cliven
Bundy, who graze their livestock on public lands without paying required
fees.
What’s the solution to this problem? Raising the fees would be a good start.
PEER reports that the grazing fee on private lands in 16 western states is
currently $22.60 a month — still not quite enough to feed a cat, but more in
line with actual costs. Raising the fees even higher might encourage
ranchers to find new ways to raise their animals instead of relying on
subsidized use of public lands — and to protect fragile habitats in the
process.
Number of animals killed in the world by the fishing, meat, dairy and egg industries, since you opened this webpage.
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