Bill relaxes regulation on elk farms, over sportsman opposition
Here’s a news item from the Associated Press: BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Elk ranchers who sell meat and charge hunters to shoot trophy bulls inside fences convinced a Senate panel to relax requirements to test for a deadly brain disease that’s plagued other states’ herds. All Idaho domestic elk now must be tested annually for chronic wasting disease. The Senate Agricultural Affairs Committee on Tuesday voted 5-3 to allow virtually all Idaho elk ranchers to test just 20 percent of their animals once every three years. The bill heads to the Senate. Some sportsmen’s group opposed the measure, raising longstanding fears of disease spreading from domestic elk to Idaho’s prized wild elk herds. But Sen. Jeff Siddoway, an elk rancher and Republican Senate committee member, argued testing has never detected disease in Idaho’s domestic herds, proving the standards can be safely relaxed.
* This story was originally published as a post from the blog "Eye On Boise." Read all stories from this blog