| PRIVATE
PROPERTY RIGHTS VIOLATED BY LIVESTOCK AGENTS HAZING
WILD BISON
Property Owners Welcome Bison, Not DOL, on Cattle-Free
Horse Butte
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - May 29, 2008
Press Contacts:
Janae & Rob Galanis, 406-646-4848
Ed & Vicky Millspaugh, Hebgen Lake Estates, 406-646-9176,
(cell) 406-580-0321
Stephany Seay, Buffalo Field Campaign, 406-646-0070
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YELLOWSTONE, MT - With horses, a helicopter,
state and federal law enforcement, and U.S tax dollars
to spend, Montana Department of Livestock agents have
descended upon the cattle-free Horse Butte Peninsula,
violating private property rights and upsetting human
and wildlife residents in an attempt to chase wild American
bison out of Montana and into Yellowstone National Park.
"These actions underscore the arrogance of the
Department of Livestock, cattle industry, and agencies
carrying out the Interagency Bison Management Plan,"
said Mike Mease, co-founder of Buffalo Field Campaign.
"There are no cattle out here and the landowners
want the buffalo around, yet the government-funded cowboys
act like the only private property rights that matter
are those pertaining to cattle."
The Horse Butte peninsula is a 26,000-acre landscape
encompassing both public (Gallatin National Forest)
and private property. It is 100% cattle-free at all
times of the year. Horse Butte provides critical winter
range and calving grounds for American bison. The majority
of Horse Butte residents welcome bison, but do not welcome
the presence of the Montana Department of Livestock.
Homeowners have expressed their wishes that the DOL
refrain from chasing bison off of their land, but these
wishes continue to be ignored.
Buffalo Field Campaign documented Department of Livestock
agents harassing wild bison, including newborn calves,
chasing them off of the Galanis property using a helicopter,
which they flew at about 20 feet above the ground, violating
airspace. Fence lines were damaged in the opereation.
The Galanis family, shaken and distraught over today's
actions by the DOL, refrained from immediate comment
until they are able to assess the damage caused by the
operation. As soon as the Galanis family took ownership
of the former Munns' Ranch, they immediately placed
signs around their 700+-acre property defining it as
a "Buffalo Safe Zone," the largest in Montana.
"The Galanis family removed the problem by removing
the cattle on Horse Butte," said Stephany Seay,
a spokeswoman for Buffalo Field Campaign. "Now
we need to remove the Department of Livestock."
Buffalo Field Campaign also documented as DOL agent
Shane Grube and another DOL agent, both on horseback,
chased one wild bull bison off of other private properties
within Yellowstone Village housing area. Residents came
from their homes to scorn the DOL's actions and asked
them to leave the premises. The residents were ignored.
"The Interagency Bison Management Plan is supposed
to be adaptive, so adapt!" said Mease. "The
fact that there are no cattle on Horse Butte is a significant
change and it means the Department of Livestock has
absolutely no reason to be there harassing bison!"
In March of 2008, Horse Butte homeowners, Buffalo Field
Campaign, and Earthjustice called on state and federal
officials to stop hazing, capturing, and killing bison
that migrate onto Horse Butte. View the letter and press
release at http://www.buffalofieldcampaign.org/media/press0708/pressreleases0708/030408.html.
There are no cattle currently grazing in the Hebgen
Lake region, and they may not be trucked into the region
until early July. There is no risk of brucellosis transmission
at this time. There has never been a documented case
of wild bison transmitting brucellosis to cattle.
More than 1,700 wild American bison have been eliminated
from the remaining wild population this winter under
actions carried out under the Interagency Bison Management
Plan (IBMP), as well as state and treaty hunts. Bison
are a migratory species native to vast expanses of North
America and are ecologically extinct everywhere in the
United States outside of Yellowstone National Park.
Buffalo Field Campaign strongly opposes the Interagency
Bison Management Plan and maintains that wild bison
should be respected as a valued native wildlife species
and allowed to naturally and fully recover themselves
throughout their historic native range, especially on
public lands.
Buffalo Field Campaign is the only group working in
the field, every day, to stop the slaughter of the wild
American buffalo. Volunteers defend the buffalo and
their habitat and advocate for their lasting protection.
BFC has proposed real alternatives to the current mismanagement
of American bison that can be viewed at http://www.buffalofieldcampaign.org/actnow/solutions.html.
For more information, video clips and photos visit:
http://www.buffalofieldcampaign.org
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