An agreement signed this week by the National Park Service (NPS), environmental groups, and 18 families who have long run cattle and dairy operations at Point Reyes National Seashore ends a decade-long dispute over ranching within the national park.
Located on the Pacific Coast of Marin County, about an hour¡¯s drive from San Francisco, Point Reyes National Seashore is part of a United Nations-designated International Biosphere Reserve for its diverse plants and wildlife. More than 100 plant and animal species at the Seashore are listed as rare, threatened, or endangered. Point Reyes National Seashore is one of only a few national parks that allow commercial cattle ranching, a practice that pre-dated the Seashore¡¯s establishment in 1962.
In 2016, a lawsuit initiated by the Resource Renewal Institute (RRI), the Center for Biological Diversity and the Western Watershed Project challenged the National Park Service¡¯s decision to issue 20-year leases to commercial beef and dairy ranches at the Seashore without any environmental analysis or public input, required under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).
Settlement of RRI¡¯s 2016 lawsuit led the NPS to update it¡¯s 40-year-old management plan in 2021, which proposed expanded ranching, livestock diversification, and mobile slaughterhouses in the national park. RRI and it¡¯s co-plaintiffs sued again, preventing implementation of the new plan, which conflicted with the park¡¯s enabling legislation and the NPS¡¯s 1916 founding mandate, ¡°to conserve the scenery, wildlife, and natural and historic objects in national parks, monuments, and reservations¡for the enjoyment in a way that leaves them unimpaired for future generations.¡±
Two groups of beef and dairy ranchers, including the Point Reyes Ranchers¡¯ Association, comprised of longtime leaseholders in the national seashore and the adjacent Golden Gate National Recreation Area (GGNRA), intervened in the lawsuit in 2022. All parties to the lawsuit agreed to mediation that same year. The Nature Conservancy joined the mediation in 2023 to help resolve the longstanding conflict. Negotiations continued until this week when a voluntary agreement was reached to wind down ranching and remove nearly 5,000 cattle grazing in the Seashore. ?
"Over the past two years, environmentalists, ranchers, and park managers worked shoulder to shoulder to forge an agreement that honors both our human connections and our conservation commitments to this remarkable landscape. This historic settlement creates a framework to protect the Seashore's irreplaceable natural resources for generations to come," said Chance Cutrano, Director of Programs at the Resource Renewal Institute.