DULUTH, Minn. -- The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
said Tuesday that it will not consider listing grey wolves as
"threatened'' under the Endangered Species Act.
The
suggestion had come from wolf protection groups who say the status
would be a compromise between the current, fully endangered status and
proposals in Congress to delist wolves entirely.
Wolves
were delisted in 2012 but a late 2014 court order has restored federal
protections for wolves in the Great Lakes area and in most western
states.
The agency, however, determined the request was a "non-substantial petition."
"We
are disappointed in the Fish and Wildlife Service's decision not to
consider this middle-ground approach to wolf management,'' said Michael
Markarian, chief program and policy officer of the Humane Society of the
United States. "A threatened listing is a reasonable compromise to this
contentious issue, and it retains some federal protection for wolves,
while providing more flexibility to the states in dealing with the
occasional problem wolf."
Bills have been introduced in
Congress this year that would override the court opinion and remove all
federal protections for wolves. They so far have not passed.
Until
other action occurs, wolves remain federally protected as endangered in
most areas and threatened in Minnesota. The distinction allows wolves
in Minnesota to be trapped by federal wildlife experts near where
livestock have been killed.
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