September 4, 2014
Lansing —A
pro-hunting representative conceded Thursday there will likely be no
wolf hunt in Michigan this year as the State Board of Canvassers
approved the language for two Nov. 4 ballot referendums seeking to
overturn laws allowing such hunting.
Drew
YoungeDyke, grassroots and public relations manager for Michigan United
Conservation Clubs and Citizens for Professional Wildlife Management,
said the pro-hunting coalition doesn’t plan to spend money campaigning
against the two wolf referendums. He said the coalition is satisfied
with a new citizen-initiated law that will take effect in 2015 and let
wolf hunting resume. “We got (the new law)
passed, and it will take effect in March,” YoungeDyke said Thursday.
“The November ballot issue will have no effect on future wolf hunts in
Michigan.”
Jill Fritz, director of Keep
Michigan Wolves Protected, disagreed. The group plans to challenge in
court a third law, passed late last month, that allows continued wolf
hunting no matter how the votes go on the referendums. Her group
contends the petition language violated a single-issue constitutional
requirement for citizen initiatives.
Fritz
also pledged a campaign asking voters to strike down the current
hunting laws. Her group collected petition signatures in 2013 and last
spring to put the two laws to a vote of citizens. “We’re
glad that the people will be informed about wolf hunting,” she said.
“(And) we hope when they go to the polls, they will vote no. Absolutely,
there will be a campaign leading up to the election.”
The
Nov. 4 referendums will ask voters to endorse or overturn
Legislature-passed 2012 and 2013 laws permitting wolf hunting. A “yes”
vote will be a vote in favor of wolf hunting. A “no” vote will be a vote
against wolf hunting.
Both laws are frozen until voters get a crack at them, meaning a wolf hunt can’t be scheduled at least until after Nov. 4. If
voters overturn the 2012 and 2013 laws, another wolf hunt can’t be set
until last month’s third pro-wolf hunting law takes effect 90 days after
the Legislature adjourns for the year — late March or early April 2015.
The
newest pro-wolf hunting law, called the Scientific Fish and Wildlife
Conservation Act, was approved by the Republican-led Legislature in
response to petitions collected by pro-wolf-hunt groups. The vote
avoided having it go before voters along with the two anti-hunting
referendums.
The new law allows the
Michigan Natural Resources Commission, made up of gubernatorial
appointees, to decide which animals can be hunted as game. It also
requires $1 million a year in state funds to battle Great Lakes invasive
species such as Asian Carp as well as free hunting and fishing licenses
for members of the military.
No comments:
Post a Comment