The Denver Post

Boost for effort to stop human-bear conflicts

- By Maryjane Glynn

Boulder County is reaping $145,500 from a state grant through Colorado Parks and Wildlife aimed at finding solutions to help prevent human-to-bear conflict.

A bill signed this month by Gov. Jared Polis, HB 211326, provides Colorado Department of Natural Resources and Colorado Parks and Wildlife $1 million for native species conservati­on, to be distribute­d to local communitie­s with the goal of reducing human-bear conflicts, according to a Parks and Wildlife news release.

Of that money, $100,500 will go to Boulder County and its partners, the towns of Jamestown and Lyons, earmarked for the Boulder County Human Bear Conflict Reduction Program. That money is intended to provide tangible deterrent material to residents that might otherwise be out of reach financiall­y.

Boulder County Parks & Open Space will act as the fiscal agent and grant administra­tor, in partnershi­p with those two towns, to purchase proven bear-deterrent solutions with the focus on addressing bears that have habituated into the community.

Additional­ly, $45,000 will go to the Boulder-based Community Fruit Rescue, a nonprofit organizati­on based in Boulder. The grant aims to expand Community Fruit Rescue’s capacity and to increase the number of fruit harvests by 25%, by developing a “Bear Conflict” branch that will quickly harvest fruit in areas of Boulder where bears are active.

“We are making sure that more people have the tools and resources needed to keep people and property safe, and save money, while protecting Colorado’s iconic black bear population,” Polis stated in the release.

Eleven of 23 applicants were granted funding from Parks and Wildlife’s new Human-bear Conflict Reduction Grant Program. The funding for Boulder County will facilitate providing heavily subsidized bear-resistant trash containers and electric fencing kits for purchase, with the hope that residents will participat­e more readily if the product is affordable.

The Community Fruit Rescue organizati­on plans to use its money to create a Wildlife Co-existence program to prevent human-to-bear conflict and unnecessar­y food waste. Also, the goal is to bring in more volunteers to participat­e in the statewide effort to preserve Colorado’s natural habitat, keep its citizens safe and allow Coloradans and wildlife to peacefully coexist, Wildlife Co-existence Program Director Melanie Hill stated in an email.

This program will have a “bear conflict” branch made up of staff members and volunteers to organize and plan local events in the Boulder area to harvest fruit where there are active bear sightings, Hill said.

He said the group’s funding also will be used to create do-it-yourself harvest kits, allowing residents to harvest their own fruits, which should help prevent unnecessar­y human-to-bear conflicts, ultimately decreasing bear fatalities.

The food collected during these harvests will be donated to food pantries, schools, soup kitchens, homeless shelters and directly to the volunteers. Fruit found unfit for human consumptio­n will be donated to a wild animal sanctuary, Hill stated.

 ?? Cliff Grassmick, Daily Camera file ?? Tenley Layne, 10, helps pick plums at a Boulder home in 2019. Community Fruit Rescue rallies volunteers to help harvest fruit that otherwise would be attracting bears or going to waste.
Cliff Grassmick, Daily Camera file Tenley Layne, 10, helps pick plums at a Boulder home in 2019. Community Fruit Rescue rallies volunteers to help harvest fruit that otherwise would be attracting bears or going to waste.

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