Courtney Kueppers
June 27, 2015
WASHINGTON –
In Minnesota, gray wolves are at their highest population since the
1950s, yet activists take issue with removing the animals from the
endangered species list without a concrete plan.
With
Republicans in the House and Senate moving to delist the wolves in
Minnesota, Wyoming, Wisconsin and Michigan, some advocacy groups are
making a final push to keep the animals protected.
This
includes the Minnesota-based group Howling For Wolves, which has spent
$20,000 lobbying in Washington this year to keep wolves on the list.
Six
decades ago, Minnesota’s wolf population fell to a record low of 750.
However, the most recent count by the Minnesota Department of Natural
Resources puts the number at upward of 2,400.
Longtime
wolf activist Collette Adkins, a senior attorney for the Center for
Biological Diversity, said wolves are doing well in Minnesota, but not
everywhere. She said that wolf populations are just re-emerging in other
regions of the country and that Minnesota wolves will migrate.
“We
only have 5 percent of their historic range,” she said. “We used to
have wolves ranging the Lower 48 and we’re not asking for wolves in
downtown Chicago, but there are lots of places where wolves could
recover and they’re not recovered. We’d like to see continued recovery
efforts before they are removed from the list.”
Rep.
Collin Peterson, D-Minn., has been outspoken about delisting the gray
wolves since December, when a U.S. District Court put them back on the
endangered list in Minnesota and the Great Lakes area. The U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service previously had delisted them in 2012.
Peterson
wrote in January that with the animals back on the list, “Farmers and
ranchers in my district now face an immediate legal predicament between
protecting their livestock from predatory gray wolves and complying with
yet another overreaching federal judicial decision.”
The
legislation to delist the gray wolves is part of a larger bill. The
delisting language would bar the rule from being subjected to judicial
review, meaning it couldn’t be overruled by a future judge. Brett Hartl,
a Washington-based endangered species policy director for the Center
for Biological Diversity, said it’s common for Congress to slip smaller
items like this into big bills.
Julia Krahe, a spokeswoman for Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., said in a statement that Klobuchar supports delisting the gray wolf.
Sen.
Al Franken, D-Minn., didn’t take a definite stance on delisting, but
noted in a statement that rural Minnesotans are rightfully worried about
wolf attacks on livestock and pets.
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