The Court further denied the Center’s request to overturn BLM’s land use plan decisions for the Northern and Eastern Colorado and Mojave Desert regions issued after extensive public participation in 2002, and left intact the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s (FWS) issuance to BLM of “incidental take” authority for the plans under the Endangered Species Act. The Court ruled the injunction will remain in place until the FWS prepares and issues a new biological opinion in compliance with the court’s ruling. FWS Ventura Field Office Supervisor Diane Noda estimates that the new biological opinion, already underway, will be issued by the last week in February 2005.BLM Desert District Manager Linda Hansen emphasized that the public still has OHV access to more than 1,700 miles of designated open routes within the Chemehuevi and Chuckwalla DWMA’s, which cover 1.7 million acres of public lands.The court’s ruling is available online at www.ca.blm.gov/pdfs/caso_pdfs/Ilston.ruling.12.30.04.pdf (This is about a 65K PDF file). The injunction is part of a lawsuit filed in 2003 challenging the FWS biological opinion on the plans, issued in 2002. In August 2004, the Court overturned the biological opinion based on a legal determination involving the regulatory definition of “adverse modification” of critical habitat for the desert tortoise.Hansen said BLM will immediately begin steps to implement the injunction, including issuance of a closure order and focus on public education efforts, posting public notices and making personal contacts by BLM personnel, including BLM’s desert rangers. For more info, including a map (in PDF) of the affected area, click here, California BLM website.California Desert District Office
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