Albuquerque Journal

Court lifts injunction on Mexican wolf releases in NM

U.S. Fish and Wildlife can resume program

- BY LAUREN VILLAGRAN JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

A U.S. appeals court has lifted an injunction that temporaril­y prevented the federal government from releasing endangered Mexican gray wolves in New Mexico, but the state says the underlying case “will continue to move forward.”

Advocates said the ruling means the federal government is again free to release endangered Mexican gray wolves into the wild in the recovery area — in New Mexico, that means between Interstate 40 and the U.S.Mexico border — despite the state’s opposition.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit in Tucson on Tuesday vacated a preliminar­y injunction sought by New Mexico’s Department of Game and Fish in district court last year. The injunction was sought as part of a broader claim by the state against the U.S. Fish and Wildlife’s wolf program.

“While we’re disappoint­ed in the court’s ruling, the case will continue to move forward,” said Lance Cherry, spokesman for Game and Fish, in an emailed statement. “We’ll continue to

do all we can to show how unpermitte­d, experiment­al release of Mexican wolves by the federal government will be harmful to New Mexicans.”

Fish and Wildlife spokesman Jeff Humphrey said, “At present, we and our solicitors are reviewing the ruling. Until we’ve reviewed that ruling, we’re not making any plans on what to do with wolves immediatel­y.”

The appeals court said in its decision that Game and Fish “failed to present sufficient evidence to support a finding that it is likely to suffer irreparabl­e harm absent a preliminar­y injunction.”

In 2015, citing an insufficie­nt management plan, Game and Fish denied the service permits it requested to release wolves bred in captivity into the wild.

Fish and Wildlife claimed authority to pursue wolf recovery under the Endangered Species Act and placed two wolf pups in a den in the Gila National Forest in early 2016 without a state permit.

Game and Fish subsequent­ly took the service to federal district court and won the preliminar­y injunction.

The appeals court decision essentiall­y gives Fish and Wildlife a green light to move forward with its wolf recovery program in New Mexico, according to advocates — even as additional litigation plods ahead.

“The ruling is noteworthy in pointing out that the Martinez administra­tion was unable to articulate any harms to the wolves,” said Michael Robinson, a conservati­on advocate at the Center for Biological Diversity in Silver City. “The decision makes clear that the Fish and Wildlife Service has the authority to do what’s needed to save the Mexican gray wolf and other endangered species from extinction.”

The program has faced stiff opposition from southweste­rn New Mexico ranchers and the administra­tion of Gov. Susana Martinez. Wolves are known to prey on cattle, and the return of an apex predator to ranch and forest lands in Grant and Catron counties has caused alarm.

“The Endangered Species Act gives them carte blanche to run over the top of anybody anytime, anywhere,” said Gila Livestock Growers Associatio­n President Laura Schneberge­r, about Fish and Wildlife. “It would be nice to see the state go ahead and look it over again, see if they can appeal it again or go at it from a different angle.”

The service counted at least 113 Mexican wolves in the recovery zone in Arizona and southweste­rn New Mexico in early 2017. That was up from 97 wolves in the wild the prior year.

In New Mexico, most of the wolves roam the Gila National Forest.

 ?? SOURCE: U.S. FISH AND WILDLIFE ?? Advocates say a Tuesday appeals court decision allows U.S. Fish and Wildlife to move forward with its wolf recovery program in New Mexico.
SOURCE: U.S. FISH AND WILDLIFE Advocates say a Tuesday appeals court decision allows U.S. Fish and Wildlife to move forward with its wolf recovery program in New Mexico.

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