| POLITICAL NOTEBOOK: Agriculture director in Shovel Brigade |
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Nevada's new Agriculture
Department director is no fan of environmentalists or the federal
government.
Tony Lesperance, a Paradise Valley rancher and former Elko County commissioner, was a vocal member of the Jarbidge Shovel Brigade that, back in 2000, marched down the tiny northeastern Nevada town's Main Street in defiance of the federal government, according to reports at the time. Review-Journal: PLAN's Launce Rake says conservationists have concerns about Gov. Jim Gibbon's new appointment.
By MOLLY BALL Nevada's new Agriculture Department director is
no fan of environmentalists or the federal government.
Tony Lesperance, a Paradise
Valley rancher and former Elko County commissioner, was a vocal member of the Jarbidge Shovel Brigade that, back in 2000,
marched down the tiny northeastern Nevada town's Main Street in defiance of the
federal government, according to reports at the time.
The man taking charge of a major state office today once
nearly got into a fistfight with a fellow commissioner in the dispute over a
flooded-out road leading to a rural campsite. He told a national magazine,
"We will rebuild the road, come hell or high water," and vowed never
to compromise.
The article in Mother Jones in 2001 described Lesperance
as one of the most radical members of a movement that energized rural
anti-government crusaders, who saw their rights being violated when the U.S.
Forest Service wouldn't let the road be rebuilt because of environmental
concerns.
John O'Brien, administrator of the Agriculture
Department's Plant Industry Division, said Lesperance's appointment was an
interim one while the Agriculture Board undertakes a national search. He said
Lesperance was suggested for the job by the governor and approved by the board.
Gibbons' previous pick for the post, Donna Rise, left last
month after a year in the job.
According to the article, some worried that the fight
would cost the county, but money was no object for Lesperance.
"I can't go on with extinguishing our rights,"
he said. "It's a line we cannot cross. To people who say, 'How are we
going to pay for it?' I say, 'Go to hell.'"
The so-called Shovel Brigade acquired a menacing
reputation. Forest Service and other federal agency workers feared for their
lives, and many quit. Lesperance's county commission was pitted against not
just federal agencies, but departments of the state government he's now agreed
to serve.
Launce Rake of the Progressive Leadership Alliance of
Nevada said he was disturbed by the appointment of a man whose views appeared
"alarmist and extreme."
The liberal group has its own issues with some federal
lands policies, but disagrees with the brigade's tactics, Rake said.
"It looks like the governor is endorsing an extreme
anti-government position," he said. "We want good, responsible
federal oversight of our commonly held lands." In Jarbidge, "what
happened was that the position people took was so radical and anti-government
that discussions broke down and there could not be compromise."
Assemblyman John Carpenter, R-Elko, a leader of the Shovel
Brigade, said he remembered Lesperance principally from a previous fight with
the feds, the 1995 dispute over a spring that originated in national forest
territory and flowed onto a rancher's land.
The Forest Service had cited the rancher for building a
pipeline for the water. Carpenter, Lesperance and others had a "work
party" to fence off the spring and claim it for the state.
Carpenter said the Jarbidge dispute was finally settled in
an agreement between locals and the federal agencies. "We've had good
relationships up there with the Forest Service and Fish and Wildlife Service
since then."
The road remains in place, and the fight now is with an
environmental group, he said.
"This was not about the feds. It was about preserving
our rights to the land," Carpenter said. "I just am a fighter for
freedom and access and things like that."
NYE COUNTY DEMOCRATS
Elsewhere in rural Nevada, Democrats in Nye County were
determined to avoid a county convention plagued by intrigue on Feb. 23, when
the Clark County convention descended into chaos.
So determined were they that they wouldn't even let the
media observe the proceedings, the Pahrump Valley Times reported. A reporter
for the Tonopah Times-Bonanza & Goldfield News was kicked out of the
meeting at the Ramada Inn Tonopah Station because Nye County Democratic
Chairman Loyal Watkins said "he was worried about Republicans spying on
the convention," according to the Times.
In a brisk closed session -- Watkins banned speeches in
the interest of time -- 29 delegates for Hillary Clinton and 26 delegates for
Barack Obama were elected to attend the state convention in Reno in May.
Watkins told the Pahrump paper he spied Republicans in the
room. "I guess maybe I was a little bit too gruff, but I had to get those
people out of there," he said.
That meant ejecting anyone who wasn't a Democrat,
including the nonpartisan reporter.
The county Republican Party chairwoman, Fely Quitevis, was
asked about the alleged spying and responded with a laugh, the paper reported.
"We are too busy to do things like that," she
said.
BUCKLEY BACKER
At the Washoe County Democratic convention that same day,
Assemblywoman Sheila Leslie, D-Reno, reportedly told the crowd to get ready to
vote for Assembly Speaker Barbara Buckley, D-Las Vegas, for governor in a
couple of years.
Leslie, who is close to Buckley, is far from the first to
float the speaker's name. But was she announcing Buckley's candidacy? No, she
said last week. It was just wishful thinking.
"It's no secret that I and others have encouraged her
to run," Leslie said.
In 2010, term limits will prevent Buckley from staying on
as speaker. If she chooses to run for governor, she won't be well known in
Northern Nevada, so Leslie is doing some advance work to increase her name
recognition.
"People in Reno don't know how wonderful she
is," Leslie said. "I just took the opportunity to say what a great
candidate she would be."
Buckley on Friday stuck to her standard response:
"I'm focusing right now on running for the Assembly. People have been nice
enough over the years to ask me to consider running for governor or attorney
general or other offices. I'm flattered, and I have thought about it a bit, but
I'm not doing anything official at this point. I am focusing on my race and the
next legislative session, should I be honored to receive the support of my
district once again."
Pointing to Gov. Jim Gibbons, whom Buckley has frequently
criticized, she said, "I can't help it if people say, 'Hey, don't you
think you could do a better job?' Of course I'm going to engage in those
conversations with my friends."
This November, Buckley expects Democrats to gain at least
one Assembly seat and take over the state Senate.
Several qualified Democrats are interested in running for
Assembly District 5, an open seat previously held by Republican Valerie Weber,
who is running for Clark County commissioner, she said. And in the past week
alone, "I've gotten three calls from qualified candidates who are
seriously interested in (another) Assembly district," the 13th.
District 5, once evenly split, now has a pronounced
Democratic edge in voter registration. And District 13, home to Republican Chad
Christensen, has gone from a wide GOP advantage to a narrow Democratic one.
Republican Donna Toussaint, a retired information
technology manager, community volunteer and former homeowners association
president, is running to succeed Weber in District 5.
CONGRESSIONAL HOPEFULS
And where, you ask, has Robert Daskas been?
The Democratic hopeful in Congressional District 3 spent
two days in Washington, D.C., last week at a training session put on by the
Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. Jill Derby, running in District 2,
also reportedly attended.
"The focus was on the latest field strategies and
rapid-response tactics," campaign manager Heather Urban said. "The
purpose was to prepare the campaigns and candidates to handle attacks"
from conservative independent-expenditure groups.
Daskas spoke to the Clark County convention, just after
officials ordered the doors closed because the large number of people violated
fire codes.
A full-time campaigner since he left the district
attorney's office in October, Daskas has been speaking to community groups,
like seniors groups and Democratic clubs, and has been endorsed by several
labor unions, Urban said.
Contact reporter Molly Ball at mball @reviewjournal.com or (702) 387-2919. Find the complete article here.
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