Lodi News-Sentinel

Gray wolves could lose protection under GOP bill

- By Kellen Browning

WASHINGTON —Republican­s have only a few weeks left until they cede control of the House to Democrats, but the first big post-election GOP vote won’t address taxes or border wall funding. It involves wolves. Republican­s are furiously pushing legislatio­n that would remove gray wolves in the 48 contiguous U.S. states from the list of threatened and endangered animals protected under the Environmen­tal Species Act, which safeguards those animals’ habitats. The House of Representa­tives is expected to vote on the bill Friday.

In Washington state, the federal act protects gray wolves in the eastern third of the state. Throughout the state, the wolves are protected under state law.

Despite legal challenges, the state’s Department of Fish & Wildlife has approved the killing of wolves who attack livestock, reigniting controvers­y between ranchers and conservati­onists.

Congress returned this week for a post-election session that’s expected to last about a month. Republican­s are eager to get the bill passed in this lame duck session, figuring that once Democrats take control in January, conservati­onists will make it tough to get it enacted.

“This is bipartisan. But still, I think it fits easier on our agenda,” said Rep. Pete Sessions, R-Texas, who chairs the House Rules Committee that approved rules of debate for the wolf bill. “I think it makes it harder when there’s a new Congress.”

Sessions said both Republican­s and Democrats from western states, where many gray wolves in the U.S. live, made a push to get the bill through.

“I hope that there’s agreement that it needs to be handled,” he said. “But it’s an emotional issue to people that don’t live in the west.”

Not all western lawmakers like the bill.

“Last year, the California (Department of) Fish and Wildlife was so excited to finally announce that we had a family of gray wolves that was found,” said Rep. Norma Torres, D-Ontario. “But that’s three pups and one adult female and one adult male. I hardly think that that is an acceptable level that we would remove all protection­s from them.”

If the bill passes, Washington state law would still protect wolf habitat from human interferen­ce — except in the many acres of federal land in Washington, which includes several national forests and parks, said Shawn Cantrell, a vice president with Defenders of Wildlife, a conservati­on organizati­on. Currently, Cantrell said, the U.S. Forest Service protects wolf dens and habitat against timber harvesting, grazing and other human activity. If wolves are removed from the list of endangered species, “those obligation­s and protection­s for wolves would go away,” he said.

“Wolves have made an amazing recovery in many areas, but they are still very much in the beginning stages of recovery in a number of places,” Cantrell said. He criticized the lack of a “good management strategy or plan that ensures that wolves will be able to sustain without going back to being an endangered species.”

But livestock industry associatio­ns, representi­ng ranchers who have to deal with wolves scaring and attacking their cattle, argued in a letter to House leadership that the U.S. wolf population has recovered and would have already been removed from the endangered species list, if not for “activist litigants” who “used the judicial system to circumvent sound science and restore full ESA protection­s to these predators.

“To avoid the suppressio­n of science through the court system, (the bill) should also be exempted from judicial review,” the livestock groups wrote.

Another lawsuit threatens to stymie those hoping protection­s on wolves are removed.

On Wednesday, the Center for Biological Diversity sued U.S. Fish and Wildlife, which, independen­t of the House bill, is currently reviewing the status of gray wolves. The department could recommend the removal of wolves from the endangered species list, which it called for the last time it reviewed the species’ status in 2013.

The lawsuit alleges Fish and Wildlife violated the Endangered Species Act by failing to provide a nationwide recovery plan for the wolves.

 ?? LUIS SINCO/LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? A female Mexican gray wolf runs inside a holding pen at the Sevilleta Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico on June 10, 2009. Federal authoritie­s intend to remove endangered species protection­s for all gray wolves in the Lower 48 states, carving out an a exception for a small pocket of about 75 Mexican wolves in the wild in Arizona and New Mexico, according to a draft document obtained by the Los Angeles Times.
LUIS SINCO/LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH A female Mexican gray wolf runs inside a holding pen at the Sevilleta Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico on June 10, 2009. Federal authoritie­s intend to remove endangered species protection­s for all gray wolves in the Lower 48 states, carving out an a exception for a small pocket of about 75 Mexican wolves in the wild in Arizona and New Mexico, according to a draft document obtained by the Los Angeles Times.

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