Board Urged to Oppose Santa Rosa Island GrabNews Home Page Home
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Source of this article - Los Angeles Times, January 19, 2006
January 25 update
By Catherine Saillant, Times Staff Writer
A Ventura County supervisor Wednesday asked his board colleagues to join him in
opposing any future efforts to give the military special hunting grounds on
Santa Rosa Island.
Supervisor Steve Bennett said U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter
(R-El Cajon) likely would renew his attempts to turn the island into a hunting
and recreation haven for military personnel. He said the Ventura County Board of
Supervisors should go on record against such legislation.
The board will
consider Bennett's request Tuesday when it votes on a legislative agenda for the
coming year.
"This will allow our friends in Congress to have one more
thing to point to as evidence of public opposition to this," Bennett said. "The
public paid for this island with the idea that it be made available to everyone.
That includes the military. We don't want the public to lose access to it so
that a select few can use it."
Hunter in December withdrew an amendment
to a defense bill that would have transferred Santa Rosa Island from the
National Park Service to the Department of Defense. He had sought the transfer
to allow disabled veterans and other military personnel and their guests to hunt
elk and deer and engage in other recreational activities on the island. But he
backed off the amendment after an outcry from environmentalists, Democrats and
National Park officials.
He promised to reintroduce a different version
of the bill in 2006, with language that would make the island available for the
military's use without transferring its operation from the National Park
Service.
But Hunter's revised language would allow deer and elk
populations to remain on the island — a provision that is in conflict with the
National Park Service's plan to eradicate the herds by 2011 in an effort to
restore native plants and grasses.
The National Park Service bought Santa
Rosa Island in 1986 for $30 million from Vail & Vickers Ltd., a ranching
company. Vail & Vickers retained a 25-year right to occupy 7 1/2 acres of
the island and to run cattle and operate a commercial hunting operation
there.
In 1997, to settle an environmental lawsuit, the company agreed to
halt its cattle operations and to begin removing elk and deer populations in
2008.
Channels Islands National Park Supt. Russell Galipeau said he
opposes any legislation that would extend the hunting operations beyond 2011.
The National Park Service intends to convert to public use the ranch buildings
currently used by Vail & Vickers, and to open the entire 52,000-acre island
to the public year-round.
Hunting from August to December keeps much of
the island off-limits to the public now, Galipeau said.
"We restrict the
use of the island for just basically the hunting," he said. "We don't want any
visitors running into any complications."
Calling the island a unique
resource rich with native vegetation, fossils and Native American artifacts,
Bennett said efforts to restore it to its natural state are being "undermined by
maneuvers designed to continue a hunting operation that currently benefits
few."
"When taxpayers bought the island it was with the idea to return it
to a natural ecosystem," Bennett said. Vail & Vickers "made an agreement and
now that this agreement is ready to run out, they want to change it."
Update...
Hands Off Santa Rosa Island, Board SaysSource of this article - Los Angeles Times, January 25, 2006
By Catherine Saillant, Times Staff Writer
Ventura County supervisors Tuesday roundly criticized a California congressman's
attempt to designate Santa Rosa Island as a recreational hunting ground for the
military and voted unanimously to oppose any future attempts to remove the
island from the National Park Service.
Although Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-El
Cajon) in December withdrew a defense bill amendment that would have transferred
Santa Rosa Island — the second-largest of the five islands that make up Channel
Islands National Park — from the National Park Service to the Department of
Defense, his staff said last week that he intends to introduce a revised version
of the measure later this year.
Supervisor Judy Mikels said the National
Park Service bought the island in 1986 for $30 million with the agreement that
elk and deer hunting would cease in 25 years.
She called Hunter's efforts
a "ploy" to continue hunting beyond 2011.
"The military doesn't want
this island," Mikels said. "Hunter is trying to hide behind our men and women in
uniform for something that is absolutely dishonest."
Removing Santa Rosa
Island from Channel Islands National Park would be "absurd," Supervisor Kathy
Long said.