The court found that the U.S. Forest Service improperly permitted feeding elk on two of the three feedgrounds under review and that the claims made by the agency in defending its decision were “unpersuasive,” “implausible,” and “unreasonable.” Photo: Nick Sulzer // Buckrail

JACKSON, Wyo. – Yesterday, a Wyoming federal judge ruled in favor of an environmental group’s challenge of elk winter feed grounds in Bridger-Teton National Forest (BTNF).

The court found that the U.S. Forest Service improperly permitted feeding elk on two of the three feedgrounds under review and that the claims made by the agency in defending its decision were “unpersuasive,” “implausible,” and “unreasonable.”

Conservation groups challenged the U.S. Forest Service for continued permitting of winter elk feeding at the Alkali Creek feedground in the Gros Ventre drainage, Dell Creek feedground in Sublette County and Forest Park feedground in Lincoln County without appropriate analysis of the harmful impacts of feeding on wildlife, including the increased risk of transmission of lethal chronic wasting disease (CWD) on feedgrounds.

The conservation groups that challenged the forest service were the Sierra Club, Western Watersheds Project, Wyoming Wildlife Advocates, and the Gallatin Wildlife Association.

CWD is an incurable and always fatal disease that affects the central nervous system of elk, deer, and moose. The court specifically noted that the risk of transmission of chronic wasting disease at feedgrounds poses a clear danger to area wildlife.

“Even with fatal chronic wasting disease now surrounding all three of these elk feedgrounds, the Forest Service has continued to ignore science, ignore legal directives, and put Wyoming wildlife at grave risk of catastrophic disease outbreaks,” said Connie Wilbert, Director of Sierra Club Wyoming. “This court decision makes it explicitly clear that the Forest Service can no longer simply ignore the devastating impacts that a chronic wasting disease epidemic centered on feedgrounds could have on elk herds throughout northwestern Wyoming.”

“This is the second time in three years that a federal court has found the Forest Service’s supplemental feeding activities in the Bridger-Teton National Forest unlawful. This is a serious and recurring problem that needs to be addressed immediately. It’s time for the Forest Service to stop permitting feedgrounds without any analysis or review of the role feedgrounds play in disease transmission and overall health of Wyoming’s elk. It’s time to put wildlife first,” said Kristin Combs, Executive Director of Wyoming Wildlife Advocates.

“It’s time we manage our wildlife with the health and welfare concern they deserve. That has been the responsibility of the U.S. Forest Service since its establishment, but what this decision tells us, the U.S. Forest Service has not been doing that”, said Clint Nagel, President of the Gallatin Wildlife Association. “Basically, the agency has been sacrificing our wildlife for the benefit of others and that is contrary to their mission. We believe it is morally wrong to congregate wildlife in an artificial setting that endangers their survival.”

The Bridger-Teton National Forest occupies the traditional lands of the Shoshone-Bannock, Eastern Shoshone and Cheyenne people.

She's a lover of alliteration, easy-to-follow recipes and board games when everyone knows the rules. Her favorite aspect about living in the Tetons is the collective admiration that Wyomingites share for the land and the life that it sustains.