Published March 06, 2012
ST. PAUL — Establishing wolf hunting and trapping seasons is popular
among many at the Minnesota Legislature, but lawmakers are hearing from
those who do not like the idea.
By:
Don Davis, Worthington Daily Globe
ST. PAUL — Establishing wolf hunting and trapping seasons is
popular among many at the Minnesota Legislature, but lawmakers are
hearing from those who do not like the idea.
So far, opponents
have not slowed House and Senate bills from advancing. The latest vote
came Tuesday, when the Senate natural resources committee unanimously
approved allowing the Department of Natural Resources to establish the
seasons.
“We’re trying to balance,” Sen. Paul Gazelka, R-Brainerd, said about his bill. “We are not trying to wipe out the wolf.”
Tom
Casey, a private citizen concerned about wolves, told the committee
that Gazelka’s bill would open up much of the state for year-around wolf
hunting.
The proposal would allow Minnesotans in the area
generally northeast of Brainerd to kill a wolf any time if it appeared
to be an immediate threat to livestock or domestic animals. In the rest
of the state, wolves could be killed at any time for almost any reason,
Casey said.
Brad Sagen of near Ely, chairman of Northeast
Minnesotans for Wilderness, complained wolf hunting could drive the
animals out of their normal habitats into areas where they usually would
not roam.
Catherine Zimmer of St. Paul, a former Alexandria-area resident, said hunting wolves hinders her hobby: wildlife watching.
Zimmer said DNR statistics show there are four times as many wildlife watchers than hunters, and they spend more money.
“You are diminishing my chance to see a wolf,” she said.
The
dispute over wolf hunting arose when the federal government late last
year removed the gray wolf from the endangered species list, opening the
possibility of hunting and trapping seasons.
About 3,000 gray wolves live in Minnesota, the largest population in the lower 48 states.
The DNR said that number is about twice what is federal officials require, opening the opportunity for wolf hunting.
Sportsmen are thrilled with the possibility of a wolf season.
“This
is probably one of the most historic hunting bills that have gone
through the Legislature,” said Gary Leaf of Sportsmen for change.
Committee
Chairman Sen. Bill Ingebrigtsen, R-Alexandria, said the hunting and
trapping seasons basically would be a year-long test.
Farm organizations joined sportsmen in supporting the proposal.
Under the bill, Minnesota hunters and trappers would pay $26 for a license.
Those from other states could not trap wolves and would pay $230 to hunt them.
The
bill allows the DNR to begin the wolf hunting season at the same time
deer season begins, and sportsmen said many hunters will enter a lottery
to buy a wolf license so they may hunt both animals at the same time.
Davis works for Forum Communications Co., which owns the Daily Globe.
source
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