September 08, 2012
Opponents of Minnesota’s upcoming wolf trapping and hunting season
rallied in downtown Duluth on Friday afternoon hoping to spur a public
outcry that might keep wolves off limits for at least one more year.
By:
John Myers, Duluth News Tribune
Opponents of Minnesota’s upcoming wolf trapping and hunting season
rallied in downtown Duluth on Friday afternoon hoping to spur a public
outcry that might keep wolves off limits for at least one more year.
But
it appears the efforts of Howling for Wolves and other groups may be
too little, too late, with the state’s first wolf season in a
half-century set to start in just 57 days.
Some 23,477 hunters and trappers have applied for 6,000 permits and the chance to kill one of up to 400 wolves later this year.
About
35 people gathered in Lake Place Park holding signs and howling on
occasion, including members of the Sandy Lake Band of Ojibwe.
“Governor
Dayton has the authority to stop the hunt. That is the ultimate goal,”
Deb Balzer, one of the group’s leaders, told the News Tribune.
Dr.
Maureen Hackett, a member of the Howling group, said the state is
catering to a small minority of hunters while most Minnesotans want to
continue protections for the animal.
“Minnesotans want to be able
to hear that howl in the woods. They know there’s no reason to have this
hunt,” Hackett said. “We want people to know the killing is going to
begin soon but that we can still make a difference.”
Howling for
Wolves and other wolf advocates also have paid for billboards along
major highways, including Interstate 35 in Duluth, that depict bloodied
wolves caught in traps, asking the public to call and oppose the
upcoming seasons to “stop the DNR torture.”
The group also has aired television ads in some markets.
Chris
Niskanen, communications director for the Minnesota Department of
Natural Resources, said his agency was inundated by comments on the wolf
hunt at the DNR exhibit at the recent Minnesota State Fair, likely in
part spurred by the Howling campaign.
“We had a lot of people tell
us they weren’t happy with the hunt and say we shouldn’t be doing it.
But we had about an equal number of people thank us for hanging tough
and not bowing to the pressure and keeping the season on,” he said.
“With more than 23,000 applications (for a hunting or trapping permit)
there’s clearly a lot of interest in a wolf hunt in Minnesota. We know
there are strong feelings on both sides.”
Howling for Wolves also
has filed a formal document, called a petition for rulemaking, to the
DNR, asking the agency to rescind the administrative rule establishing
the hunt and to call the season off. The DNR is legally obliged to
respond to the petition by Oct. 8, but is certain to refuse the request.
That
could open the possibility of a lawsuit to stop the hunting and
trapping seasons. But it’s unclear what, if any, legal standing such a
suit would be based on. Hackett said she wouldn’t comment on the
potential for litigation.
Supporters of a wolf hunt note there is
no biological reason not to shoot and trap a percentage of the wolf
population. They also note high numbers of wolf attacks on livestock and
pets in Minnesota, with more than 200 on average targeted by government
trappers each year near where livestock have been killed.
But
wolf supporters counter that killing wolves hundreds of miles away from
where livestock have been killed will do nothing to solve farmers’
problems and that the hunt is aimed more at sport than solving conflict.
Wolves
are back on the game list of animal species after nearly 40 years of
federal protections. By the 1970s, the big carnivores were wiped out of
every state except Minnesota in the continental U.S. Even here, there
were only about 500, with nearly all confined to the wilds of the
Superior National Forest.
Under federal protections their numbers
grew, with an estimated 3,000 wolves now across the northern half of
Minnesota and hundreds more in Wisconsin and Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.
Wolves also are thriving in a half-dozen western states.
With
their numbers healthy in those states, the federal government in recent
years has moved wolves off the endangered species list and allowed
states to hunt and trap them once again. Every state has done so, with
the first Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan seasons set for this autumn
and winter.
Minnesota lawmakers, with relatively little
opposition, this year ordered the DNR to hold the season, including
holding it during the firearms deer hunting season when more hunters are
afield.
“One of their criticisms has been there hasn’t been
enough public input, but there were ample public hearings during the
legislative process,” Niskanen said. “That’s what the Legislature is
for.”
One wolf advocacy group has had some success in Wisconsin,
where a judge has ordered a temporary injunction against the state’s
plan to allow dogs during the wolf hunting season. The groups argued
that allowing dogs to chase and battle with wolves is a violation of the
state’s animal cruelty laws that ban dog fights.
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