FINAL BILL REPORT

                  SSB 6551

                          C 163 L 96

                      Synopsis as Enacted

 

Brief Description:  Managing grazing lands.

 

Sponsors:  Senate Committee on Natural Resources (originally sponsored by Senators Loveland, Rasmussen, Snyder, Morton, Oke, Prince, A. Anderson, Hargrove, Hochstatter, Winsley and Sellar).

 

Senate Committee on Natural Resources

House Committee on Natural Resources

 

Background:  The Conservation Commission has adopted standards relating to grazing on state-owned and managed lands based on the requirement of SHB 1309 (1993).  There has been some confusion as to the interpretation of the legislative mandate and the Joint Administrative Rules Review Committee asked the Legislature to resolve the problem.

 

Summary:  The purpose of the act is to ensure that all state agricultural grazing and grazable wood­lands are managed in keeping with the statutory and constitutional mandates of each state agency.  The ecosystem standards adopted in 1993 are not intended to prescribe practices.  Land managers are encouraged to use adaptive management in selecting and implementing practices that work towards meeting the standards based on the best available science and evaluation tools.  The standards are applied through a collaborative process, which includes the land managers and lessees looking at the land along with state agencies to reach agreement on management and resource objectives.  Full discussion of management options must be made, and no land manager gives up his management prerogative.

 

Efforts are made to make land management plans economically feasible and compatible with the lessee's or land manager's entire operation.  Coordinated resource management planning is encouraged where there are multiple ownerships.  The Department of Fish and Wildlife is to consider multiple use on its lands and the Department of Natural Resources is to allow multiple use on lands owned and managed by the department.  The ecosystem standards are to be achieved by applying land management practices on riparian lands in order to reach desired ecological conditions.

 

The Legislature urges state agencies to use the coordinated resource management and planning process where there are either multiple ownerships or multiple use resource objectives.  In all cases, the use of coordinated resource planning is a voluntary decision by all concerned parties, including the agency's private landowners and other people.

 

The intent section states that many wild stocks of salmon are in a state of decline and that bull trout are petitioned for an endangered species listing.  The Legislature directs that steps must be taken in areas of fish and wildlife habitat management, water conservation, salmon stock protection and education to prevent further losses.

 

The Legislature finds that maintenance and restoration of Washington's range lands and shrubs-steppe vegetation is vital to the long-term benefit of the state.  The development of coordinated resource management plans that take into consideration the needs of wildlife, fish, livestock, timber production, water quality, and range land conservation improves the stewardship of the lands. 

 

The Legislature finds that there is insufficient technical support for the coordinated resource management process and agencies need to emphasis that process.   The purpose of the law is to establish state grazing lands as a model in the state for the development and implementation of standards that can be used in coordinated research management plans for all state-owned grazing lands.

 

Votes on Final Passage:

 

Senate    49 0

House     97 0 (House amended)

Senate    44 0 (Senate concurred)

 

Effective:  June 6, 1996