EQIP Program Provides Huge Subsidies To Public Land Ranchers

The USDA’s Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) should be targeted by Congressional budget hawks every time a Farm Bill comes up for renewal because the department’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) is doling out enormous amounts of EQIP money to public land ranchers across West.

EQIP funds can provide cost-sharing assistance to public land ranchers to help them implement “conservation” practices. The money is disbursed by the NRCS through contracts with the ranchers. It’s a called a cost-sharing program because the NRCS pays 50 to 75% of a project’s cost, and the rancher is supposed pay the rest. Most of the EQIP assistance awarded to public lands ranchers is used to fund the construction of new livestock waters and pasture fences. Typically, the EQIP money is used to purchase the materials, such as fence wire and posts, while ranchers contribute the labor.

2019 EQIP Audit

The amount of money the NRCS pays out to help producers implement EQIP projects isn’t based upon receipts, invoices, or evidence of the local actual costs. Instead, the NRCS uses a payment schedule of the estimated costs of various practices in order to reduce the workload associated with collecting specific actual cost data. In September 2019 the USDA’s Office of Inspector General Audit Report 10601-0005-31 found that, “component costs used to calculate financial assistance to EQIP producers are outdated and may not consistently represent the producer’s cost to implement conservation practices.” This lead to agricultural producers being “unreasonably compensated.” The auditors stated that:

Because NRCS relied on outdated and inaccurate component prices to calculate payment schedules, we question over $2.16 billion obligated for FYs 2016–2017.

Public lands ranchers were not allowed to receive EQIP assistance when Congress created the program as part of the Federal Agricultural Improvement and Reform Act of 1996. That was probably because most Americans felt they were already getting a significant subsidy in the form of the below-market grazing fees they pay for using public lands managed by the Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management (BLM).

But that situation changed after the beginning 2002, when Arizona’s Tonto National Forest, which includes much of Gila County, ordered its grazing permittees to remove almost all of their cattle from the Forest because of an increase in the severity of a long-term drought. Arizona had experienced two of the driest winters on record, back-to-back, and six of the last seven winters had brought below-normal precipitation. Furthermore, 791,284 acres of the Tonto’s total 2,964,308 acres, or about 27% of the Forest is hot Sonoran Desert, which is inherently unsuited for livestock grazing, regardless of any drought.

2002 Farm Bill

In April of 2002 Arizona Gov. Jane Hull reacted to the state’s drought crisis by submitting a drought relief request to Republican President George W. Bush’s Secretary of Agriculture, Ann Veneman, and on May 17 Secretary Veneman responded by declaring all of Arizona a drought disaster area. A few days before that, on May 13, Congress had passed the 2002 Farm Bill, which included a revision to the EQIP program that changed the definition of the program’s eligible lands to allow the inclusion of, “other agricultural land that the Secretary determines poses a serious threat to soil, air, water, or related resources.” The new definition was so vague that it could include almost any land, including public land – especially if it was located in a drought disaster area.

The true intention of this change was made clear when the NRCS consequently published its new EQIP rules in the Federal Register on May 30, 2003. Section 1466.8(c) of the new rules stated that EQIP eligible lands included:

(2) Publicly owned land where:

(i) The land is under private control for the contract period and is included in the participant’s operating unit; and

(ii) The conservation practices will contribute to an improvement in the identified natural resource concern;

The new rules were issued too late to be applicable to the 2003 EQIP financing cycle, but by 2004 the Tonto National Forest EQIP Pilot Project was operational. Arizona’s Gila County Cattlegrowers Association had proposed it to Arizona’s NRCS State Conservationist Michael Somerville, and it had subsequently been approved by Secretary Veneman’s administration in Washington D.C. (Dale Moore, her chief of staff, was a former lobbyist for the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association.) By September of 2004 the pilot project had awarded more than $1.5 million in EQIP assistance to ranchers with grazing permits on the Tonto National Forest. The NRCS stated that the goal of the pilot project was “preserving sustainable grazing in the Tonto National Forest.” In November Secretary Veneman announced that the program had been expanded to include public lands ranchers in neighboring New Mexico, another place where the regional drought had forced the Forest Service to remove cattle.

Most of the Tonto’s permitted cattle were still off the the land because of the drought, so it was difficult to understand how the EQIP money would be used. But the Arizona Cattle Growers’ Association had succeeded in May 2004 in getting a new drought policy implemented that was more lenient than the one the Tonto had implemented in 2001, which had required the land to be rested from grazing for a minimum of one growing season after a drought.

The Tonto began to issue authorizations for cattle to resume grazing on the Forest in 2005, and it was largely because the ranchers used the EQIP money to build numerous new livestock watering sites and pasture fences in the uplands. These new “range improvements” were characterized as conservation measures because they allowed the cattle to be more evenly distributed, supposedly reducing the overuse of their favorite gathering places, such as lowland riparian areas. But few, if any, of the new fences were built to exclude cattle from streams, so the primary ecological effect of the new waters and pastures was to bring the negative impacts of cattle to upland areas that had previously seen few cows. (This was confirmed by a research article titled Upland Water and Deferred Rotation Effects on Cattle Use in Riparian and Upland Areas that was published in a 2017 edition of Rangelands, a periodical publication of the Society for Range Management. The researchers found that building upland livestock watering sites didn’t significantly improve the condition of riparian areas, unless the riparian areas were fenced off, but primarily facilitated rotational grazing and more livestock on the uplands.)

In 2005 the Society for Range Management, Arizona Section, awarded rancher David Cook, co-owner of the DC Cattle Co. LLC, and permittee of the Tonto’s Coolidge-Parker grazing allotment, their Range Manager of the Year Award. One of the reasons, they explained, was that he helped get the Forest’s EQIP Pilot Project approved. Cook quickly took advantage of the EQIP assistance, and other government assistance programs available to Arizona ranchers.

Government Assistance For Ranchers Program Key
ALLBAWPFECPEQIPEWPHPCHeritage FundLCCGPLFPLOFFAPLRPPFWPWQIG
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)
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.
DC Cattle Ranch
DC Cattle Ranch (DC Cattle Co. LLC) - Coolidge-Parker Allotment
YEARSPROGRAMAMOUNTPROJECT NAME
2004-2015EQIP$339,226
2005LCCGP #05-23$17,926Livestock Water and Monitoring
2007LCCGP #07-20$76,989Livestock Water and Fencing
2014-2018LFP$36,125
2019HPC #18-603$10,560Parker Coolidge Tank Cleanouts
2022EQIP$3,228
2022APWIAP*$500,000Rebuild Livestock Fences & Waters Burned in the 2021 Telegraph Fire
2023EQIP$17,007
$1,001,061TOTAL 2004 - 2023
*Temporary program administered by the Arizona Dept. of Forestry & Fire Management.
NOTE: In 2021 $2.325 million in federal Burned Area Rehabilitation (BAR) funds were approved to help rebuild livestock fences & waters damaged in the 2021 Telegraph Fire. The money was shared among eight grazing allotments, including this one, in the Tonto National Forest's Globe Ranger District.
Ranch manager David L. Cook also manages some other local ranches. From 2005 to 2021 his DC Cattle Co., LLC, received another $395,599 in EQIP assistance. Some of it was likely used on the Tonto’s Sleeping Beauty Complex grazing allotment, which he managed for a local mining company. On May 24, 2017, Cook , who had been elected to the state’s House of Representatives in 2016, testified at a hearing of the U.S. House of Representatives’ Natural Resources Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigation that his ranch had been “held hostage” by federal red tape.
2008 Farm Bill

The 2008 Farm Bill continued to allow public lands ranchers to receive EQIP assistance, and afterwards the NRCS published new rules on May 29, 2009, that made any public lands rancher eligible for EQIP assistance, even if the project had nothing to do with improving their private land. When Congress subsequently passed the 2014 Farm Bill, it continued the EQIP eligibility for public lands ranchers, and folded the NRCS Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program (WHIP) into the EQIP program.

Congress has also steadily increased EQIP funding. It’s difficult, however, to know how much EQIP money is going to public land ranchers because the NRCS doesn’t track them as unique EQIP recipients. But according the the USDA, from 2005 to 2020 the NRCS issued EQIP payments of more than $246 million in Arizona alone, although that included all recipients, not just public land ranchers.

Note: On July 2, 2021, the Arizona NRCS announced the availability of additional financial assistance, including more EQIP money, for ranchers impacted by wildfires and drought.

These large public investments in private ranching operations have occurred during a nearly uninterrupted drought in the Southwest, and in spite of scientific predictions that the weather will become hotter and drier due to climate change. The increases in authorized cattle numbers on public land which were facilitated by the EQIP projects were intentionally implemented with little public notice. Many EQIP projects, for example, are completed without fully engaging the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) public planning process. After the passage of each Farm Bill, the NRCS has completed an environmental assessment (EA) they claimed allowed subsequent EQIP projects to be completed using NEPA categorical exclusions. But a nationwide programmatic EA does not provide the legally required site-specific analysis of the expensive and controversial new livestock management schemes being implemented on our public lands.

Bar X Allotment & Heber-Reno Sheep Driveway

The story of the Bar X grazing allotment, located in the Payson Ranger District of Arizona’s Tonto National Forest, is a good example of how EQIP funds have been used to implement new livestock management plans and increase cattle numbers on public land during drought – without the public’s knowledge.

It might never have come to light if not for the residents of Colcord Estates and Ponderosa Springs Estates. On a summer morning in 2015 they woke up to a herd of cattle trampling through their yards. These residential communities are located within the boundaries of the Tonto, in the ponderosa pines south of the Mogollon Rim off State Route 260 east of Payson. And they are also located within the boundaries of the Forest’s Bar X grazing allotment. But few, if any, of these homeowners were aware of that fact in 2015, because much of the allotment had been closed since 1979, due to severe ecological damage caused by cattle grazing, as documented in a 1977 wildlife habitat analysis, and a 1978 range analysis.

Subsequently, few of their properties were fenced. Angry residents called the allotment’s grazing permittee to complain about the situation, but he responded by pointing out that Arizona’s open range law doesn’t require ranchers to fence their cattle in, it forces property owners to fence them out.

On August 1, 2016, the residents sent a complaint, accompanied by 125 letters of concern and petitions containing 135 signatures, to the Tonto’s Forest Supervisor to request that the Bar X pasture which surrounded their neighborhoods never be authorized for cattle grazing again. The pasture wasn’t grazed that year, or in 2017, but at the beginning of 2018 the Tonto issued annual operating instructions (AOI) for the allotment which authorized the pasture to be grazed again that summer. The angry residents, now organized into a group called Neighbors of the Mogollon Rim, responded by filing a federal lawsuit on April 11, 2018, with the help of Advocates for the West.

It alleged that the Forest’s decision to graze the pasture was “arbitrary, capricious, and contrary” to the Federal Land Policy and Management Act, the National Forest Management Act, and the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). It pointed out that, according to the 1981 Bar X allotment management plan (AMP), grazing was not supposed to be authorized in the pasture unless “evaluations” had determined it had “recovered” and was capable of being grazed “on a sustained yield basis,” and the Forest hadn’t completed a NEPA analysis before it had decided to authorize the grazing.

Without a legal leg to stand on, the Tonto issued a revised 2018 AOI for the allotment on June 15, 2008, which removed the authorization to graze the pasture that summer. And on October 9, 2018, the Forest Service entered into a legal settlement agreement wherein the Tonto suspended the authorization for the Bar X allotment permittee to increase grazing on the Forest until a NEPA analysis was conducted to identify a new AMP for the allotment.

This was a victory, at least temporarily, for the homeowners. But it was also important because the research used in the lawsuit, along with the additional information provided in the Forest’s subsequent NEPA documents, revealed that many questionable decisions had been made by Tonto and Arizona Game & Fish officials in order to increase cattle grazing in this area of the Forest.

I learned about the story of the Bar X allotment when Arizona conservationists circulated copies of the August 2016 petition, the 2018 lawsuit, and the resultant legal settlement. So, when the Forest solicited public comments in February 2019 on a preliminary environmental assessment (EA) of the Bar X Allotment & Heber-Reno Sheep Driveway Grazing Authorization project, I was one of the people who dove deeper into the relevant public records.

They revealed that the Bar X permittee had purchased the ranch’s small base property, and thus acquired the allotment’s grazing permit, around 2007. At that time, the permittee was authorized to graze 130 head of cows yearlong, while several of the allotment’s pastures, including the one that surrounded the residential neighborhood, where not authorized for grazing due to ecological damage from past overgrazing. Furthermore, the eastern boundaries of the allotment were adjacent to a large corridor of Forest land called the Heber-Reno Sheep Driveway, which had also been rested from grazing for years due to past damage from livestock grazing.

After 2007, the Forest started to authorize grazing to resume on the Bar X allotment’s ungrazed pastures on a “trial basis.” Then in 2010 it began to authorize the allotment’s permittee to use some of the ungrazed pastures in the adjacent Driveway. In 2011 it also began to authorize the nearby Potato Butte and Diamond Butte ranches to use some of the Driveway’s ungrazed pastures.

No NEPA analysis was conducted before these significant decisions were made. According to the project’s preliminary EA, the decisions to begin grazing the Driveway pastures were based upon monitoring by a third party that determined they had “excess forage.” The Forest also approved numerous expensive range “improvement” projects to facilitate cattle grazing in these areas. The projects that generated decisions memos from the Forest are listed below, but there may have been others.

The projects that benefited the Bar X permittee included:

The projects that benefited the Potato Butte & Diamond Butte ranches included:

The Tonto approved all of these projects using decision memos, instead of decision notices. This allowed them to claim that the projects were categorically excluded from NEPA analysis, so didn’t require EAs – which could have been appealed by the public. Furthermore, the briefer decision memos failed to mention that some of the projects facilitated the authorization of grazing in pastures that were previously unused. A person reading the memos would have needed a lot of knowledge about local pasture names to know what was going on.

Moreover, the projects completed since 2007 which benefited the Bar X Ranch were largely paid for with public monies, most of it EQIP funds. There were other government programs too, and the table below lists all of the government financial assistance that benefited the ranch prior to the day the Tonto National Forest issued its preliminary environmental assessment in 2019 in response to the lawsuit.

Government Assistance For Ranchers Program Key
ALLBAWPFECPEQIPEWPHPCHeritage FundLCCGPLFPLOFFAPLRPPFWPWQIG
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)
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.
Bar X Ranch - Pleasant Valley District (The Bar X LLC) - Bar X Allotment
YEARSPROGRAMAMOUNTPROJECT NAME
2008-2015EQIP$401,362
2010CREIP$21,767Solar Water Pumps (Program no longer exists.)
2011LCCGP #11-74$83,596Livestock Water and Fencing
2015HPC #14-603$11,526Water Pipeline
2015HPC #14-604$12,0007 New Dirt Tanks
2016HPC #15-617$9,0003 New Roadside Dirt Tanks
2017HPC #16-606$11,360Water Storage Materials
2018 - 2021LFP$47,123
2021HPC #20-602$15,000Colcord Dirt Tanks
$612,734TOTAL 2008-2021

Financial information acquired through Freedom of Information Act requests and Public Records Requests.

Bar X Grazing Allotment, Tonto National Forest
View of Bar X Grazing Allotment, Tonto National Forest, from Forest Road 200.

The nearby Potato Butte and Diamond Butte ranches also benefited from government assistance before the EA was issued, including EQIP monies to help facilitate the use of the ungrazed Driveway pastures. The total government assistance that benefited both ranches is listed in the tables below.

Potato Butte Ranch (Potato Butte Ranch LLC) - Potato Butte Allotment
YEARSPROGRAMAMOUNTPROJECT NAME
2005-2007EQIP$26,041
2012HPC #11-606$12,000Juniper Tree Removal
2014HPC #13-608$17,065Juniper Tree Removal
2014-2021LFP$43,397
2015HPC #14-608$15,000Solar Water Well Pump
$113,503TOTAL 2005 - 2021
Diamond Butte Ranch (M-Lazy-S Cattle Co.) - Diamond Butte & Soldier Camp Allotments
YEARSPROGRAMAMOUNTPROJECT NAME
2006 - 2014EQIP$341,469
2010HPC #09-608$7,000Dirt Tank Maintenance
2015HPC #14-605$24,000Soldier Camp Area Dirt Tanks
2018-2021LFP$86,192
2019HPC #18-607$12,000Dirt Tanks
2019LRP$18,0003.5 Miles Water Pipeline, Two 5,000 Gallon Water Storage Tanks, 3 Water Troughs
2022LFP$40,266
$528,927TOTAL 2006 - 2022

All of this government financial assistance facilitated a significant increase in cattle grazing in the area during the ongoing megadrought.

Arizona drought history 2000-2020
(www.drought.gov/drought/states/arizona)

The original 2018 AOI for Bar X allotment, before it was revised in response to the lawsuit, had authorized 240 cows yearlong, 18 bulls yearlong, and 120 yearlings for 5 months. That equates to about 3,602 animal unit months (AUMs), a 230% increase over the 1,560 AUMs originally authorized in 2007.

A measure of the impact this increase in cattle grazing inflicted upon the area’s wildlife habitat can be had by comparing cattle and wildlife AUMs, as an AUM estimates how much forage a grazing animal eats in a month.

Livestock Animal Unit Months (AUMs)

  • A cow, or a cow and her calf, grazing for a month, equals 1.0 AUM
  • A bull grazing for a month typically equals 1.4 AUM
  • A yearling grazing for a month typically equals 0.7 AUM
  • A horse typically equals 1.3 AUM

Wildlife Animal Unit Months (AUMs)

  • An elk grazing for a month typically equals 0.6 AUM
  • A mule deer or pronghorn antelope grazing for a month equals 0.20 AUM
  • A white-tailed deer grazing for a month equals 0.15 AUM

It’s doubtful that these new livestock waters provided much benefit to the local elk population, because there are numerous seeps, springs, and perennial stream stretches in the area. The elk know where the water is and elk regularly travel much further than cattle to reach water (Krausman 1996). Instead, the new waters probably created spatial competition between the elk and the cattle, because elk move out of pastures when cattle are present (Wallace 1987). These waters also likely created a significant increase in forage competition between the local elk and cattle, because they allowed more cattle to be on the land during a practically uninterrupted drought.

Furthermore, none of these projects included any specific measures to protect the local riparian habitat from cattle. Some riparian grazing utilization guidelines were included in the Forest’s final decision notice issued for the Bar X Allotment & Heber-Reno Sheep Driveway project on December 13, 2019. But cattle weren’t restricted from accessing the area’s perennial stream stretches. Instead, the Forest claimed in the project’s EA that the riparian use guidelines would be met mostly because pastures with riparian areas would only be grazed for a “short” duration of “about 1 to 2 months.” But it only takes a few days for cattle to tear up a stream during a hot summer.

The Forest’s final decision for the Bar X allotment also allowed for the authorization of up to 9,250 AUMs of adult cattle annually, and up to 498 AUMs of yearlings for 5 months, for a total of 9,748 AUMs – which is an increase of about 270% from the 3,602 AUMs initially authorized in 2018, and that was a 230% increase over what had been authorized in 2007, before the permittee received any government assistance.

Updates

On February 12, 2020, Advocates for the West filed a follow up federal lawsuit on behalf of Neighbors of the Mogollon Rim to challenge the Forest’s final decision for the Bar X Allotment & Heber-Reno Sheep Driveway Grazing Authorization.

On January 11, 2021, the the Tonto National Forest’s Payson Ranger District issued 2021 annual operating instructions (AOI) for the Bar X allotment that authorized grazing from July through September in the Colcord Pasture, which surrounds the Colcord Estates and Ponderosa Springs Estates neighborhoods. The pasture wasn’t grazed in 2020 because of the pending litigation, but the Forest decided to authorize grazing in the pasture in 2021 due to the grazing permittee’s purported need to use it in order to be able to sustain his “core herd” because of the ongoing long term drought. In April 2021 the Neighbors of the Mogollon Rim, with the continued help of Advocates for the West, filed a motion for preliminary injunction to oppose the Forest’s decision to put the permittee’s financial interests above all other uses, and asked that cattle continue to be excluded from the pasture – at least until the ongoing litigation was resolved. But U.S. District Judge Douglas L. Rayes denied the motion on June 30, 2021, and cattle were allowed in the pasture.

Cattle in the Ponderosa Estates neighborhood, September 2021
Cattle from the Payson Ranger District’s Bar X grazing allotment, in the Ponderosa Estates neighborhood, morning of September 19, 2021.

On July 1, 2022, the Neighbors of the Mogollon Rim (NOMR), with the help of Advocates for the West, filed their opening brief with Judge Rayes regarding their continuing lawsuit against the Tonto.

On November 9, 2022, the Center for Biological Diversity filed a 60-day Notice of Intent to Sue the Tonto National Forest for its violations of the Endangered Species Act because of inadequate livestock management on multiple grazing allotments.

On May 5, 2023, Advocates for the West won a legal victory when the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in response to their follow up lawsuit that the Forest Service made “serious errors” in violation of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) in approving a plan to expand grazing on the Tonto National Forest’s Bar X allotment – including opening pastures that had been closed to grazing for nearly 40 years, which surround the communities of Colcord and Ponderosa.

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