25 April 2014
Success for Arizona’s Mexican Gray Wolves: Arizona Governor Vetoes Bad Bills
Last week, we updated
you on the status of bad bills making their way through Arizona’s state
legislature. But this week, we have some great news to report!
Arizona’s Governor Brewer vetoed two anti-wolf bills.
The first would have given
ranchers permission to kill endangered Mexican wolves on public land. If
passed, this legislation would have put the recovery of endangered
Mexican gray wolves at greater risk. The second bill called wolves
“varmints” and aimed to end state participation in Mexican wolf recovery
efforts unless the federal government coughed up funding for a vague
laundry list of problems. We are thrilled that Governor Brewer has
vetoed these senseless bills, which were more about making a statement
about states’ rights than solving any important issues related to
Mexican gray wolves. A third bill, which sought to establish a war chest
of taxpayer money to fight federal efforts to recover the lobos, hasn’t
made it out of the legislature.
Poachers Kill More Elk in Idaho Than Do Wolves
According to an article this week,
poachers in Idaho killed more elk, moose and deer than wolves did in
2013. Officials reported 30 elk, four moose, 13 mule deer and 57
whitetail deer were killed by poachers in northern Idaho in 2013. They
said that based on their estimates of undetected illegal killing,
poachers are actually killing as many as 600 elk, 80 moose, 260 mule
deer and 1,000 whitetail deer annually in the region and thousands more
statewide. Too often Idaho places the blame for declining elk hunting
opportunities on wolves. This bit of news coverage sheds some light on a
more significant threat to elk—illegal killing—instead of using wolves
as a scapegoat.
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