Feds may remove wolves’ protection quickly
Move could precede new administration
BOISE – Federal wildlife managers hope to remove wolves from the endangered species list in Idaho and Montana before President-elect Barack Obama takes office.
But environmentalists say a decision before President Bush leaves office will simply delay final resolution by throwing the dispute back into the courts. They say the best course is to take modest interim steps now and let the Obama administration take a fresh look at wolf management nationwide next year.
Either way, a new administration more favorable to environmentalists will inherit the job of sorting out a controversy that has raged since the 1980s.
The Bush administration is moving forward with plans nonetheless.
Ed Bangs, wolf recovery coordinator for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, said this week that his agency will analyze comments on the administration’s proposed wolf-management plan, which were due Friday
“I’m hoping we can get to a final rule by the end of the year,” Bangs said.
In March, wolves were removed from the protections of the endangered species list in Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Eastern Oregon, Eastern Washington and northern Utah. That action gave primary responsibility for managing the animals to the states, which proposed to loosen conditions under which wolves could be killed and to allow hunting. Environmentalists challenged that action, and in July a federal judge in Montana stopped the delisting, placing the predators back on the endangered species list.
U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy in Missoula said the delisting plan was flawed because wolves were allowed to be killed on sight year-round in 90 percent of Wyoming.
In October, the federal government offered a new proposal to remove the animals from Endangered Species Act protection; it is the comment period on that plan that just ended. Federal officials did not reveal how the new plan would differ from the one that Molloy rejected. Instead, they asked the public to comment on a set of questions aimed at Molloy’s objections.
Molloy said he agreed with the claims of the 11 environmental groups that filed a lawsuit.
They argued that wolves in Yellowstone National Park were not genetically mixing with other wolf populations, as the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said was necessary.
If the wolves don’t interbreed throughout the region, that could leave isolated and genetically threatened enclaves, not a sustainable population. Bangs has said his agency’s research and scientific documentation shows that the populations are mixing genetically.
The judge also said in his ruling that the wolf plans proposed by state wildlife managers in Montana and Idaho were as good as or better than the previous federal rules. Still, Idaho Department of Fish and Game officials have sought to demonstrate to Molloy that their plan for managing the 800 wolves in the state is conservative, said Fish and Game Wildlife Bureau Chief Jim Unsworth.
“We’ve put in a little more explanation about how our hunting season will function in the first years and subsequent years,” Unsworth said.
Opponents have sought to depict Idaho’s wolf hunting goals as excessive, he said.
But the Idaho Fish and Game Commission said its rules would not let wolf numbers drop below 520 wolves, five times the minimum number set by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
“The idea is to have a sustainable wolf population we can hunt,” Unsworth said.