"We are so thankful for WELC's tenacity in providing a voice for the grassroots."
Kevin Mueller, Utah Environmental Congress
Featured Case Study
WELC successfully beat back industry's attempts to slash the
land designated for the recovery of the threatened Mexican Spotted Owl. The Arizona Cattle Grower's Association
challenged the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's designation of 8.6 million
acres of critical habitat in Arizona,
New Mexico, Colorado,
and Utah for the owl's
recovery. "This was a complete
victory for the Mexican Spotted Owl," stated attorney WELC attorney Matt
Kenna "as the judge rejected all arguments of the
Arizona Cattle Growers and upheld the critical habitat designation."
The Service listed the owl as threatened in 1993, but did
not designate critical habitat for the owl, as required by the Endangered
Species Act, It was only after litigation that the Service finally designated
the required habitat, but its initial designation of only 4.6 million acres was
successfully challenged as insufficient for the owl's recovery. The Service revisited its habitat
determination for the owl, and in 2004 increased its critical habitat
designation to 8.6 million acres. The
Arizona Cattle Grower's Association filed suit, challenging the 2004 critical
habitat. WELC represented the Center for
Biological Diversity in successfully defending the Service's improved habitat
designation.