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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Cat-shooting plan dies in Wisconsin

Associated Press

MANITOWOC, Wis. – A month after Gov. Jim Doyle said a plan to allow hunters to shoot stray cats was making Wisconsin a laughingstock, the public advisory group that raised the issue decided Friday to let it die.

“There is no need to push it any further,” Wisconsin Conservation Congress chairman Steve Oestreicher said of a proposed change to allow licensed hunters to shoot feral cats that kill songbirds and other wildlife.

The proposal ignited a firestorm among animal rights groups that called it inhumane and dangerous – and raised the specter that hunters would shoot cats that had only wandered from their homes.

Still, 57 percent of those at the Conservation Congress’ meetings in all 72 counties last month favored the idea, which supporters said would let people deal with nuisance stray cats.

Delegates at the group’s convention in Manitowoc voted Friday to recommend the change to the Natural Resources Board, but the group’s executive committee decided against it. For the proposal to become law, it would need legislative approval and Doyle’s signature.

The La Crosse firefighter who proposed the idea, Mark Smith, complained the advisory group caved in to animal rights activists.

“I think it is wrong that these activists hold such power as they do,” he said. “The politicians are all scared of them and lay down. I am one little guy who was looking to change something. It is not about animal cruelty; it is about individual landowner rights.”

Some estimates indicate 2 million wild cats roam Wisconsin. South Dakota and Minnesota allow wild cats to be shot.