- Article by: PAUL WALSH
- Updated: September 26, 2013
The actress urges the governor to suspend the next wolf hunting season in the state; he said he can’t.
Jessica Lange
Photo: Chitose Suzuki, Associated Press - Ap
Hollywood actress and “Minnesota daughter” Jessica Lange is urging Gov. Mark Dayton to suspend the next wolf hunting season in Minnesota.
Lange cites the sharp drop in the state’s
wolf population following the first of the newly reinstituted hunts last
year and adds that hunters do this for no more than sport, fun or
trophies.
“Nearly all Minnesotans believe the wolf
is an asset that should be protected for future generations,” wrote
Lange, who grew up in Cloquet, lived for a time in Stillwater and now counts a place in the woods near where she was raised as one of her homes.
In the letter released Wednesday by the
Twin Cities-based advocacy group Howling for Wolves, Lange said the
state’s reauthorization to resume the hunting of wolves was rushed by
the Legislature and the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR)
“to cater to particular groups, who for years had been clamoring for the
chance to kill wolves.”
Dayton responded in a written statement, pointing out that he does not have the power to halt the hunt.
“Since Ms. Lange no longer lives in
Minnesota, it is understandable that she is not familiar with all of the
considerations in the Legislature’s decision to establish a wolf
hunting season in Minnesota,” the statement began. “That decision was
written into law; thus only the Legislature can change its terms.”
Maureen Hackett, founder and president of
Howling for Wolves, said that Lange “contacted us and asked what she
could do … to be of help to the wolf.”
Hackett said having Lange’s support for
her group’s effort to halt the hunt is beneficial because “she’s a
Minnesota daughter, so to speak … and lives in wolf country.”
The number of wolves that hunters can kill
in Minnesota this fall will be slashed nearly in half, from 413 a year
ago to 220. Also, only 3,300 hunters and trappers will be given permits
this year to kill wolves, down from 6,000. The early season runs from
Nov. 9 to Nov. 24.
The licensing reductions follow a survey
last winter that estimated the state’s wolf population at 2,211 — a 24
percent decline from 2008, but a figure that didn’t include this year’s
surviving pups.
In that first season since wolf hunting
resumed in Minnesota, Lange contended that more than half of the wolves
killed were less than 2 years old and almost a third were less than a
year old.
“They were not problem wolves,” her letter
said. “They were not in conflicts with people, livestock, or domestic
animals. They were just wolves living wild and free in our North Woods.”
The state’s recent announcement of a
nearly 25 percent drop in Minnesota’s wolf population “should compel
action,” she said. “We haven’t had this few wolves in our state since
1988.”
Lange, whose Minnesota property is within
one of the wolf hunting zones, also went after the “cruel methods” used
to hunt and trap wolves, referring to “metal leg-hold traps that crush
limbs, wire choke snares that cause painful brain bleeding, and bait
like food and the calls of wolf pups in distress that lure adult
protectors to their death.”
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