The County Commission will consider whether to publish the ordinance during the regular meeting, which starts at 10 a.m., after the 9:30 a.m. reports from county officials.
Dominating the regular meeting are three resolutions opposing federal conservation acts that restrict private and public property rights, according to the resolutions.
It is unknown who is proposing the resolutions, since no staff member was told to draft such resolutions by the County Commission in prior meetings and authorship is not given.
The first resolution is “demanding immediate restoration of the permitted uses of our national forests.”
It says the U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona entered an order Sept. 12 in the case of WildEarth Guardians versus U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services that shut down all timber management in Region 3 national forests.
The USFWS must re-analyze the effect of forest plans on the recovery of the Mexican Spotted Owl before timber management resumes, the resolution states.
WildEarth was given the opportunity to amend the order to allow people to collect firewood until the review is complete, but USFWS was not given the opportunity to weigh in on the negotiation, the resolution states.
Because of the order, the honor of providing the “Capitol Christmas tree” from the New Mexico Carson National Forest may be lost, the resolution says. The logging industry and other timber activities are also halted.
The Sierra County Commission “petitions its Congress for redress to revisit the application and scope of the Endangered Species Act, so that recovery of isolated species do not continue to be elevated above the fundamental, basic, inherent and unalienable rights of our residents,” the resolution states.
“In every stage of these oppressions the Board has petitioned for redress in the most humble terms, only to have such petitions be answered by repeated injury,” the resolution says, referring to how “county residents have suffered from this latest order and the reintroduction of the Mexican Gray Wolf.”
The second resolution is “in opposition to the designation of the Animas, Corduroy, Diamond Creek and its tributaries Seventyfour Draw Creek, Whitetail Canyon, Taylor Canyon and the Upper Reaches of Beaver Creek as Wild and Scenic Rivers.”
“The designation will mean irrigation, flood control, recreation and water supplies downstream will all be secondary uses,” the resolution states.
It is “another social injustice to the people of Sierra County, levied upon them by the Federal Government, after the destructive impacts on ranching and hunting with the introduction of the Mexican Gray Wolf,” the resolution states.
The third resolution “opposes the designation of additional wilderness within Sierra County,” referring to the Cibola Forest Plan now being developed.
There is a small portion of the Cibola Forest in the county, “but management of the forest touches the lives of almost every inhabitant,” the resolution states.
On a related issue, the County Commission will consider hiring the “NM/AZ Coalition of Counties for Economic Growth” to review “state and federal regulatory actions impacting land and wildlife management.”
The Coalition will potentially prepare, find funding for and direct litigation of court cases.
Any litigation will be funded “by amendment” of the contract. The county will pay $2,500 up front for one year of membership with the Coalition, if the County Commission approves the contract. Membership includes one voting member on the board of directors of the Coalition.
Also on the agenda is the possible award of a “Request for Proposals” to manage FEMA construction projects. King Industries of Ruidoso is being recommended by staff. It is a one-year contract that may be renewed three times, which would give the contractor four years of work. Funding is to come from state Gross Receipts Taxes and “allowable” FEMA reimbursements.