Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Hunting group files to intervene in NRB suit

- Laura Schulte Laura Schulte can be reached at leschulte@jrn.com and on Twitter at @SchulteLau­ra.

MADISON – A hunting advocacy group is asking to intervene in a legal battle over whether Frederick Prehn can remain on the Natural Resources Board even though his term expired this spring.

Hunter Nation, a Kansas-based advocacy group, is asking to intervene on behalf of hunters in Wisconsin. The group is being represente­d by the conservati­ve Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty.

Anthony LoCoco, an attorney with WILL, said the group decided to intervene to ensure the voices of all parties are being heard in the argument over whether or not Prehn should be able to retain his seat, despite the fact that his term expired in May.

“Hunter Nation represents a valuable perspectiv­e in the suit, which is the voice of the regulated community,” he said. “And they would like to intervene to argue that Chairman Prehn lawfully holds over in his seat.”

Prehn has repeatedly refused to step down from his position on the board after Gov. Tony Evers announced a new appointee — Sandra Dee Naas — at the end of April. He has continued to chair board meetings and participat­e in votes since May, as Naas has watched from the public seating area at each.

In past interviews, Prehn has stated that important upcoming votes have fueled his desire to stay in the seat, including the August vote on the upcoming fall wolf hunt in which the quota was set at 300 animals, and other votes on water quality issues, including regulation­s for PFAS, or “forever chemicals.” The wolf quota was more than double the 130 recommende­d by the agency.

He said a 1964 state Supreme Court decision allows for board members to stay on after their term expires, until a replacemen­t is confirmed by the state Senate. According to that decision, the expiration of Prehn’s term does not create a vacancy on the board. Vacancies only occur if there is a death, resignatio­n, formal removal or the board member moves out of state.

So far, leaders of the Republican-led Senate have given no indication that they plan to schedule hearings for Democratic Gov. Evers’ appointees.

But, in the lawsuit filed last week in Dane County Circuit Court, Attorney General Josh Kaul argues that the 1964 ruling no longer holds because state law has changed since then. He’s asking the judge to issue an order removing Prehn from the board or confirming Evers has the power to do so, even without a confirmation hearing held by the state Senate.

State lawmakers also asked to intervene in the lawsuit after it was filed. Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu of Oostburg said the action was necessary because the case is “about upholding the statutes and practices of the Legislatur­e,” and to prevent the erosion of the people’s voice in the appointmen­t process.

The Republican­s’ request was approved Friday, and two lawyers were hired to represent Prehn on the Legislatur­e’s behalf, in addition to the attorney already appointed to defend Prehn by the state.

LoCoco said Wisconsin members of Hunter Nation are affected by the decisions of the Natural Resources Board, which serves as the policy-setting arm of the Department of Natural Resources.

“Hunter Nation is regulated by the Natural Resources Board in all of their hunting activities,” he said. “And so they have an interest in ensuring that the board is lawfully constitute­d, operating lawfully and not illegally spending taxpayer funds, since many of its members are Wisconsin taxpayers.”

A decision on Hunter Nation’s interventi­on in the Prehn lawsuit, the decision now lies with Dane County Circuit Court Judge Nia Trammell. No hearings have yet been set in regards to the attempts by the Legislatur­e or Hunter Nation to intervene.

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