Install the app
How to install the app on iOS

Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.

Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.

  • Don't miss out on all the fun! Register on our forums to post and have added features! Membership levels include a FREE membership tier.

Fighting Wolves Politically

mtnpull

Well-known member
Lifetime Membership
I don't know how many of you know, but there is a bill (HR 6028) being presented for the de-listing of wolves from the endangered species act. This would enable each state to manage wolves as they choose. If you are a sportsman or outdoor enthusiast you need to take action otherwise we may lose our elk and moose herds permanently. The anti's have millions of dollars at their disposal to fight this, we need to unite and win this one.

Please visit this site and sign the petition and donate if you can. Forward this to everyone you know and encourage them to sign and donate if possible.

Thanks in advance for your support!

http://biggameforever.org/
 
or if we could get wyoming to have a wolf plan the feds would live with. We would already have the wolves delisted. Remeber the orginal charter had to ahve all 3 states with a viable plan. only idaho and montana have a viable plan. wyoming just won't come up with a viable plan. I get sticking it to the feds etc etc. But wyoming is sticking it to there neighbors becasue they know the rules and just don't want to play along.

tim
 
So I go to the link and subscribe but don't see a way to sign the Petition. Sends me a confirmation link to my email but still nothing linked to the petition. Do I need to pay to vote?
 
Ron, I think if you just fill out that upper right hand corner and you get the email(and you confirm by clicking on the link) then you signed the petition. Thanks! If you are feeling wealthy go ahead and donate too.:face-icon-small-ton I did.:clap2:
 
Ron, I think if you just fill out that upper right hand corner and you get the email(and you confirm by clicking on the link) then you signed the petition. Thanks! If you are feeling wealthy go ahead and donate too.:face-icon-small-ton I did.:clap2:

Wealth$$$$
That's funny.:lol: You saw the SUV after it hit the deer on Sunday.:face-icon-small-win
 
signed it as well. Wolves in IMHO are the greenies way to stop hunting.

I like Wyomings idea of wolves being treated as predators. Idaho and Montana had seasons for them but I doubt that would slow the wolves down. treating them like coyotes is the only way to make the wolf situation work. You can have them in Yellowstone but outside of the park they are fair game!!
 
Looks like Butch Otter in Idaho has set the stage.

Something is going to happen. IMO

The way it sounds right now it's open season. SSS

Thunder

BOISE, Idaho —
After talks with the federal government collapsed, Gov. C.L. "Butch" Otter ordered Idaho wildlife managers Monday to relinquish their duty to arrest poachers or to even investigate when wolves are killed illegally.
Otter rejected the wolf management Idaho has conducted for years as the federal government's "designated agent" after a U.S. District Court judge in Montana returned wolves to Endangered Species Act protections earlier this year.
This means Idaho Department of Fish and Game managers will no longer perform statewide monitoring for wolves, conduct investigations into illegal killings, provide law enforcement when wolves are poached or participate in a program that responds to livestock depredations.
In an angry letter to U.S. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, the Republican governor said withdrawing from wolf management will keep Idaho hunters and their money from subsidizing the federal program. Otter accused the federal government of foisting wolves upon Idaho - he calls them "your wolves" - and promised to quickly submit plans asking for special permission to kill dozens of wolves to protect big game herds.
"History will show that this program was a tragic example of oppressive, ham-handed 'conservation' at its worst," Otter wrote. "Idahoans have suffered this intolerable situation for too long, but starting today at least the state no longer will be complicit."
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the federal agency that oversees endangered species, didn't immediately return a phone call seeking comment on how it will respond to Idaho's move.
It's unclear just how wolves will be managed now; between 1995 and 2005, the Nez Perce Tribe in north-central Idaho managed Idaho's predators, before the state stepped in. Keith Lawrence, a Nez Perce wolf manager, didn't immediately return a phone call.
Idaho has about 850 wolves and insists the species is recovered in the northern Rocky Mountains after its reintroduction to the region in the mid-1990s.
U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy in Missoula restored Endangered Species Act protections following a lawsuit from environmentalists who argued Idaho and Montana wolves could not be under state control while Wyoming wolves remained under federal control.
Douglas Honnold, lead attorney with Earthjustice who represented the environmental groups, said Otter's decision shows that the state doesn't want to cooperate with efforts to make sure wolves are adequately protected.
"We're disappointed the governor wants to play politics with wolves instead of come up with a legitimate recovery program for wolves, that complies with the law and the science," Honnold said from his offices in Bozeman, Mont.
With Molloy's ruling in August, Idaho and Montana have had to cancel public hunts, something that's especially irked Otter. He contends the first legal harvest that started in 2009 and ended earlier this year demonstrated that states could manage wolves responsibly.


"Today I join many Idahoans in questioning whether there is any benefit to being a designated agent without the flexibility of a public hunt," Otter said, adding he's doubtful that continuing as designated agent would speed up the delisting process.
Montana statewide wolf coordinator Caroline Sime in Helena didn't immediately return a phone call about her state's plans for its predator population, or how it will respond to Idaho's move.
Otter's advisers had been negotiating with Salazar and other federal officials since September on a plan for Idaho to continue to manage wolves within its borders. Among other things, Otter insisted on provisions giving state managers more power to kill wolves that prey on elk, moose or deer in areas where the state says big game herds are suffering.
Republican U.S. Sens. Jim Risch and Mike Crapo separately have introduced a bill that aims to exempt wolves in Idaho from federal protections that were restored by Molloy's order.
 
it will be interesting to see how all this plays out. Just becasue idaho isn't going to enforce the rules doesn't mean the feds won't. I still think poaching a wolf will get you in trouble. But there shouldn't be as many watching eyes.

on the flip side allowing the feds to manage a state resource doesn't make sense either.

So do i use my wolf tag i bought in january or not?
 
Premium Features



Back
Top