Las Vegas Review-Journal

County asks state to ban wildlife kill contests

Competitio­ns illegal in Calif., Ariz., N.M.

- By Shea Johnson Contact Shea Johnson at sjohnson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0272. Follow @SHEA_LVRJ on Twitter.

Clark County commission­ers on Tuesday formally urged Nevada to ban wildlife killing contests — a form of hunting competitio­n already barred by neighborin­g states that activists have castigated as “unethical,” “barbaric” and a “sick bloodsport.”

In such contests, single shooters or teams of two set out at dawn to kill as many coyotes, rabbits, bobcats or other small mammals as they can, according to activists, who say that animals are then often thrown away and that lead ammunition strewn on public lands risks being ingested by wildlife and poisoning the food chain.

Participan­ts compete for money or other prizes, the county said, and because Western states such as California, Arizona and New Mexico have already banned the practice, Nevada has become a destinatio­n for contest organizers.

There have been more than two dozen competitio­ns in Nevada in recent years, at least four which have occurred in the county, according to a resolution unanimousl­y adopted by the commission imploring the Nevada Department of Wildlife “to take immediate action” to outlaw the contests.

“I am proud to have sponsored this resolution, which will help to ensure that the public is safe from stray bullets by unethical shooters in a hurry to kill as many animals as possible and protect our state’s wildlife from inhumane practices and unnecessar­y slaughter,” Commission­er Justin Jones said in a statement.

The authority to establish a ban falls on the state Board of Wildlife Commission­ers, a nine-member panel appointed by the governor, and not the state’s wildlife agency.

State biologists will provide scientific informatio­n requested by the Wildlife Commission when the board considers any regulatory changes, which is a lengthy and public process, Nevada Department of Wildlife spokesman C. Douglas Nielsen said.

“It is not our role to determine what is acceptable to society,” Nielsen said in an email about the state agency, adding that “if the department is asked for its recommenda­tions, they are based on science.”

Wildlife activists praised the county’s decision, noting that it was the first forward movement against the contests in Nevada six years after the Wildlife Commission voted 7-1 to deny a petition seeking to end them.

“With the passage of this historic resolution to condemn the scourge of wildlife killing contests in our state, Nevada has been put on the path toward joining the bevy of other states that have already eliminated these barbaric practices,” said Annoula Wylderich, the Nevada state director for Animal Wellness Action, in a statement.

Connie Howard, the chair of conservati­on and public lands for the Sierra Club Toiyabe Chapter, wrote a letter of support stating that “nothing is more antithetic­al” to the club’s mission of wildlife preservati­on and protection than “killing contests that glorify the killing of animals purely for blood sport with the intention of seeing who can kill the most.”

And Patrick Donnelly, the Nevada state director at the Center for Biological Diversity, underscore­d that there was no evidence that killing coyotes reduces human conflict or the depredatio­n of livestock.

“We need to show respect for our native wildlife, not treat it as fodder in some sick bloodsport,” Donnelly said in a statement.

In passing the resolution, commission­ers also clearly delineated a distinctio­n between the competitio­ns and hunting. The county, according to its resolution, “values hunting as a method of food gathering, recreation, wildlife management, and protecting private property.”

 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto ?? Clark County Commission Chairman Marilyn Kirkpatric­k confers with Commission­ers Tick Segerblom and Jim Gibson Tuesday during a break in a commission meeting.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto Clark County Commission Chairman Marilyn Kirkpatric­k confers with Commission­ers Tick Segerblom and Jim Gibson Tuesday during a break in a commission meeting.

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