- Article by: DOUG SMITH , Star Tribune
- Updated: March 19, 2015
Midwestern farmers and livestock owners can now call officials for help.
A
federal program to remove problem wolves from Minnesota farms has
resumed operation after the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the state
came up with the necessary funds.
Federal
trappers began responding to depredation complaints this week. They can
trap and kill wolves they believe have killed or attacked livestock.
Midwestern
livestock owners had been in a bind since December, when a judge
reinstated wolves to the federal endangered-species list. That meant
farmers no longer could kill problem wolves themselves, and ended a
state program that had paid federal trappers to deal with depredation
complaints. “They can’t
defend their own animals on their own property, nor is there a public
program to assist them,’’ John Hart, who heads the wolf-trapping program
for the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Wildlife Services, said last
month.
But on
Thursday, Hart said the federal agency had come up with $110,000 for the
trapping program, and the state of Minnesota had promised another
$110,000.
Hart said
his agency had received only one call since Tuesday, when the program
restarted, he said, but he added that he expects many more this spring.
Calves, generally born in March and April, are easy prey for wolves.
Farmers can call state conservation officers or Wildlife Services for help.
Conservation officers have continued to investigate depredation complaints, even though they couldn’t remove problem wolves. “This is
welcome news for farmers and ranchers who currently don’t have a way to
address wolves threatening their livestock,” said Rep. Collin Peterson,
D-Minn., former chairman of the House Agriculture Committee and an
expert on federal farm programs.
Hart’s
agency has about a dozen seasonal trappers, and they usually start
working April 1 to remove problem wolves from farms. Last year, they
removed and killed 172 wolves. State-registered trappers took 39 wolves
under a separate program, and hunters and trappers killed another 272
under the state’s short-lived wolf season. That hunting-trapping season
no longer can be held because of the court ruling.
The federal
program to help livestock owners has been around since the 1970s, even
when wolves were listed under the Endangered Species Act. But federal
budget cuts ended its funding in 2011.
However, in 2012, wolves were removed from the endangered-species list and Minnesota assumed management.
State
payments abruptly ended on Dec. 19, when U.S. District Judge Beryl
Howell in Washington, D.C., placed the wolf back on the
endangered-species list. “State
policy has been that we won’t pay for wolf control for a federally
protected species,” Dan Stark, DNR wolf specialist, said last month. And
state law prevents the state from continuing its own limited
wolf-control program as long as wolves are on the endangered-species
list.
Meanwhile,
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has filed notice that it might appeal
Howell’s ruling, and bills have been introduced in the U.S. House to
remove wolves from the endangered-species list in Minnesota, Wisconsin
and Michigan.
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