Santa Fe New Mexican

U.S. sued in bid to force wolf protection­s decision

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BILLINGS, Mont. — Wildlife advocates sued federal officials Tuesday after the government missed a deadline to decide if protection­s for gray wolves should be restored across the northern U.S. Rocky Mountains, where Republican-led states have made it easier to kill the predators.

The Biden administra­tion said in a preliminar­y finding in September protection­s for wolves may need to be restored because increased hunting in Idaho and Montana posed a potential threat to wolves across the region. A final determinat­ion was due June 1.

The Humane Society of the United States and Center for Biological Diversity asked U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy in Montana to order federal officials to make a decision. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service spokespers­on Vanessa Kauffman declined comment on the lawsuit and said the agency’s review was ongoing.

Wolves were exterminat­ed across most of the U.S. by the 1930s under government-sponsored poisoning and trapping campaigns. They were reintroduc­ed from

Canada into the northern U.S. Rockies in the 1990s. Wilderness areas in Idaho, Montana and Wyoming have since become stronghold­s for wolf population­s. That’s helped fuel the species’ expansion in recent years into portions of Oregon, Washington state and California.

Republican­s governors in Idaho and Montana last year signed laws that expanded when, where and how wolves can be killed.

That raised alarm among former wildlife officials who said increased hunting could cut wolf numbers to unsustaina­ble levels.

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