BLM Lake Havasu Field Office Ranches

Ranches that are permitted to use grazing allotments administered by the Bureau of Land Management Lake Havasu Field Office and have benefited from government assistance. (Additional ranches are added to this list as information becomes available.)

Visit the Arizona Public Land Ranches Home Page for information about ranches in other regions of the state.

Government Assistance For Ranchers Program Key
ALLBAWPFECPEQIPEWPHPCHeritage FundLCCGPLFPLOFFAPLRPPFWPWHREFWQIG
AALB - Arizona Livestock Loss Board, Arizona Livestock Loss Board (federal/state)
AWPF - Arizona Water Protection Fund, AWPF Commission (state)
ECP - Emergency Conservation Program, USDA’s Farm Service Agency (federal)
EQIP - Environmental Quality Incentives Program, USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (federal)
The EQIP program absorbed the NRCS Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program (WHIP) after 2014.
EWP - Emergency Watershed Protection, USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (federal)
The Arizona EWP Drought Program was discontinued in 2001 after a critical audit.
HPC - Habitat Partnership Committee, Arizona Game & Fish Commission (state)
Arizona Heritage Fund, Arizona Game & Fish Commission (state)
LCCGP - Livestock & Crop Conservation Program, Arizona Department of Agriculture (state)
Note: Open Space Reserve Grants became LCCGP Grants after 2002.
LFP - Livestock Forage Disaster Program, USDA’s Farm Service Agency (federal)
LOFFAP - Livestock Operator Fire & Flood Assistance Program, Arizona Department of Agriculture (state)
LRP - Landowner Relations Program, Arizona Game & Fish Department (state)
PFWP - Partners for Fish & Wildlife Program, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (federal)
WHREF - Wildlife Habitat Restoration & Enhancement Fund, Arizona Game & Fish Department (state)
This fund was created by a one-time $3.5 million appropriation by the Legislature in 2006.
WQIG - Water Quality Improvement Grant, Arizona Department of Environmental Quality (federal/state)
Note: These grants were previously called Section 319 nonpoint source (NPS) water pollution prevention grants.
Alamo Crossing RanchDeGanahl RanchesHarcuvar RanchK Lazy B RanchMuse Ranch
Alamo Crossing Ranch (Tres Bees LLC) - Alamo Crossing Allotment
YEARSPROGRAMAMOUNTPROJECT NAME
2018LPF$15,688
2021LFP$4,630
$20,318TOTAL 2018 - 2021
The Alamo Crossing allotment is authorized for ephemeral grazing only, but it includes private land inholdings.
Tres Bees LLC is owned by Sand Arroyo Ranch Inc., which holds the permits for the Arrow Y, Jones, Garcia, R&E Park Lease & Sprouse grazing allotments, administered by the BLM’s Hassaymapa Field Office. Since 2019 Sand Arroyo Ranch Inc. has received $20,500 of EQIP and $105,395 of LFP assistance.
DeGanahl Ranches (DeGanahl Cattle Co. LLC) - Aguila & Calhoun Allotments, State Leases #05-001321 & #05-001874
YEARSPROGRAMAMOUNTPROJECT NAME
2015-2021LFP$217,559
2022LFP$22,663
$240,220TOTAL 2015 - 2022
The Aguila allotment is located in the adjacent BLM Hassayampa Field Office’s area.
Harcuvar Ranch (Karl K. Weisser) - Harcuvar Allotment, State Lease #05-001252
YEARSPROGRAMAMOUNTPROJECT NAME
2021LPF$56,187
2022LPF$49,127
$105,314TOTAL 2021 - 2022
K Lazy B Ranch (K Lazy B Ranch LLC) - K Lazy B Allotment, State Lease #05-002853
YEARSPROGRAMAMOUNTPROJECT NAME
2021LPF$26,638
2022LFP$21,033
$47,671TOTAL 2021 - 2022
Muse Ranch (Muse Cattle LLC) - Muse Allotment, State Lease #05-118087
YEARSPROGRAMAMOUNTPROJECT NAME
2015LPF$19,308Boyce Andersen
2016-2018LPF$20,530Boyce Andersen
2021LPF$80,109Boyce Andersen
2022LPF$26,223 Boyce Andersen
$146,170TOTAL 2015 - 2022
Mr. Andersen is one of the owners of Muse Cattle LLC.
Note: Ranch ownership often changes in Arizona, because much of the state is too hot and dry for most operations to be sustainably profitable. The ranch owners shown in the tables above are updated when information about a new owner is acquired, but the amounts of government assistance that benefited the ranch's previous owners are maintained.
Background Information About Government Assistance Programs

Some of this financial assistance was justified as being primarily for the purpose of improving wildlife habitat or watershed health. But those projects also benefited livestock production on the ranches where they were implemented. Whatever improvements to local natural resource conditions that might have resulted were tempered by the increased livestock grazing they facilitated.

The assistance didn’t always go directly to the ranchers, but sometimes to local non-profit organizations that helped them complete application processes and minimize taxable income. This included the Altar Valley Conservation Alliance, Coronado Resource Conservation & Development Area, Inc., Gila Watershed Partnership of Arizona, and the Upper Eagle Creek Watershed Association (UECWA).

Some of it also went to the local Natural Resource Conservation District (NRCD). Arizona’s NRCDs are regional subdivisions of the State Land Department, and are comprised only of local landowners, mostly ranchers, that work to obtain funding for agricultural “conservation” projects. They often work to obtain grants that directly benefit their members, including their governing supervisors. The local NRCDs also created the private nonprofit Arizona Association of Conservation Districts so they could apply for more types of assistance.

These aren't the only examples of Arizona ranches that benefited from government assistance. But it takes a lot of work to gather and compile this sort of information, because the agencies don't normally disclose it, so this web page will be updated as additional records are obtained. Also, the information provided about some of these ranches may be incomplete. But that just means those ranches benefited from at least the amounts shown.

Update

On June 21, 2024, Gov. Katie Hobbs signed HB 2865, creating a new state agency called the Natural Resource Conservation District Board, comprised primarily of local NRCD supervisors. It's tasked with providing administrative assistance to the state's regional Natural Resource Conservation Districts, which was formerly the responsibility of the Arizona State Land Department. The initial operating funds for the Board will come from the Legislature's regular annual appropriation of $650,000 to the state's NRCDs. The NRCD Board is also responsible for dispensing "conservation" and "education" grants from a new NRCD Fund to the local NRCDs and Soil and Water Conservation Districts. The monies in the fund can include state appropriations, grants and contributions - although the Legislature didn't make an initial appropriation to the fund. Most of the grants dispensed by the Board will likely benefit ranchers, as most NRCD supervisors are ranchers.

This page was last updated on Jan 2, 2025 @ 7:10 am.

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