WASHINGTON –
Senate and House Republicans are trying to insert language to delist
gray wolves in Minnesota, Wyoming, Wisconsin and Michigan from the
endangered species list in big Interior Department spending bill
proposals this week.
The
small rider, buried in pages of proposed legislation, was aired in
committee hearings Tuesday. It already has caught the ire of
environmentalists and wolf advocacy groups. Farmers and ranchers usually
support delisting the wolves from the endangered species list so they
can eliminate them when they hurt livestock.
The
language provides for the delisting of gray wolves and prohibits the
rule from ever being subjected to judicial review — which means it could
never be overruled by a future judge.
Rep. Betty McCollum, a higher-up Democrat on the Interior appropriations committee, called the proposal outrageous. “This
rider is a tremendous overreach that would interfere in the federal
listing of endangered species,” she said in a statement. “Our
committee’s role is to appropriate the necessary funds to allow the
expert staff of scientists and professionals to do their jobs working to
protect endangered species. This bill should not be mandating which
species do or do not require protection.”
Dr.
Maureen Hackett is the president and founder of Howling for Wolves,
based in Minnesota, which has hired its own lobbyist to push against the
GOP-controlled appropriations committees. She wants more resources for
farmers and ranchers to explore nonlethal wolf-control options. “We
oppose the federal delisting of wolves because it’s not based on the
best available science, and we don’t have good policies in place in the
state of Minnesota that would be responsive and responsible to keep
their [wolf] numbers up,” she said.
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