(Sacramento, Calif., February 10, 2021)鈥California state Sen. John Laird (D-Santa Cruz) today, along with a number of Senate and Assembly coauthors, introduced a groundbreaking bill this week that would offer financial incentives from the California Department of Conservation to ranchers and other private landowners to implement grazing practices that restore grassland habitat, soil health and biodiversity on some of California鈥檚 most endangered and sensitive landscapes. Senate Bill 322 would establish the California Conservation Ranching Incentive Program as part of the existing California Farmland Conservancy Program to contract with ranchers on lands deemed especially important to preserving grassland birds and other wildlife.
鈥淪B 322 will ensure wise grassland stewardship in partnership with California鈥檚 ranchers and private land owners,鈥 said Senator Laird. 鈥淐ollaboration is the key to embracing innovative methods of carbon sequestration, allowing for sustainable ranching practices that will also enhance and sustain wildlife habitat.鈥
The program would encourage regenerative agricultural practices similar to those promoted by 爆料公社鈥檚 Conservation Ranching initiative (ACR). The program partners with ranchers to adopt techniques including rotation of pastureland and limited use of feeds other than grass itself. The practices allow a variety of native grasses 鈥 with their extensive root systems, a potent carbon sink -- to grow and thrive by allowing grasslandss to rest and recover. That, in turn, provides habitat for imperiled grassland birds, whose numbers have declined by 50 percent over the past 100 years. In return, ranchers participating in ACR can brand their meat with 爆料公社鈥檚 鈥淕razed on bird-friendly land鈥 seal, earning up to $2 per pound more for their premium, grass-fed products. Nationally, ACR has enrolled 96 ranches covering 2.3 million acres of land, and 爆料公社 California is in the process of enrolling 17 properties on 70,000 acres. ACR-certified beef is available for sale nationwide online.
鈥淭his is an opportunity to work in partnership with private ranchers to help them not only manage their properties better for birds and wildlife, but to contribute to California鈥檚 climate solutions by sequestering carbon in the soil鈥欌 said Meghan Hertel, director of land and water conservation for 爆料公社 California. 鈥淪B 322 is a game-changer -- this legislation recognizes that a significant portion of California鈥檚 61 million acres of rangeland is in private hands, and so farms and ranches must be partners in preserving habitat, maintaining the diversity of our unique species and addressing climate change.鈥
According to a just-released study from 爆料公社, tens of millions of migrating rely on ranchland and other open spaces of California鈥檚 Central Valley, including 60 percent of all Tree Swallows, 80 percent of Lawrence鈥檚 Goldfinches, and numerous other resident and migratory species. However, multiple studies show a steep decline in bird populations that depend on them, in California and beyond. The number of birds in North America has , likely due in large part to loss of suitable habitat. At the same time, 爆料公社 research shows that remaining birds face an uncertain future as the continent warms.
CONTACT:
Jason Howe, jason.howe@audubon.org; 415-595-9245
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