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Action timeline

October 6, 1998 – In response to a lawsuit by the Center and the California Native Plant Society, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service listed the Lane Mountain milk-vetch and four other desert plants under the Endangered Species Act.

March 2000 – The Center, in coalition with the Sierra Club and Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, filed suit against the Bureau of Land Management. The lawsuit charged that the agency had refused to control overgrazing on the 10-million-acre California Desert Conservation Area. This negligence pushed 24 endangered species toward extinction, including the Lane Mountain milk-vetch.

November 15, 2001 – The Center and the California Native Plant Society sued the Service over its failure to designate critical habitat for eight imperiled plant species, including the Lane Mountain milk-vetch.

July 1, 2002 – As a result of the Center’s lawsuit, a federal court ordered the Service to designate critical habitat for the Lane Mountain milk-vetch and the other seven imperiled plant species.

April 6, 2004 – The Service proposed nearly 30,000 acres as critical habitat for the Lane Mountain milk-vetch, and the Center followed up by submitting comments supporting this designation.

April 8, 2005 – The Service issued its final decision, which designated no critical habitat for the Lane Mountain milk-vetch.

August 28, 2007 – The Center filed a notice of intent to sue the Service over its failure to protect habitat for the Lane Mountain milk-vetch — and over wrongful decisions affecting 54 other imperiled species.

December 19, 2007 – The Center sued the Service a second time over its failure to designate critical habitat for the milk-vetch.

Photo courtesy of California Native Plant Society