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Bison Protection Advocates Ask Agencies to
Suspend Bison Hunt
State and Federal Laws Overlooked As Hunt Continues
(September 18, 2007) Washington, DC –
The Animal Welfare Institute (AWI), Buffalo Field
Campaign (BFC), and Mr. Walt Farmer, a Jackson, WY area resident
have asked the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) and Wyoming Game
and Fish Department (WGFD) to immediately suspend the bison hunt on
the National Elk Refuge (NER) which began on September 15th. In
their
eleven-page letter to the agencies, a number of federal and
state laws and related procedural requirements that have been
overlooked or ignored in their great haste to allow hunters to kill
bison on the refuge are identified. Two bison were killed during
the first weekend of the three-month long hunt.
“It’s bad enough that the agencies
have elected to turn a refuge where bison have been fed and
protected for over 15 years into a killing ground,” states D.J.
Schubert, AWI’s wildlife biologist. “It is worse when the agencies
have failed to comply with existing law, ignored their own
directives, and manipulated procedures to expedite hunter access to
the killing grounds.”
Among the issues raised in the
letter are a doubling of the number of bison to be killed on the
refuge compared to the numbers disclosed in the management plan, a
failure by the WGFD to establish a bison herd objective prior to
implementing the hunt, and the misuse of an emergency rule when no
emergency existed. Other legal, procedural, and policy issues are
addressed including concerns about whether the hunt is “ethical” or
can meet “fair-chase” standards.
The hunt is the product of a
10-year long planning effort after a previous hunt was halted by
litigation. The final management plan, approved in April, allows
the killing of more than half of the Jackson bison herd and
increases the number of elk to be hunted but provides no concrete
plan to phase out the supplemental feeding of elk and bison on the
refuge. The FWS has been providing supplemental feed for elk and
bison on the refuge for nearly 100 and 30 years, respectively. This
feeding program has allowed the bison population to grow to its
present size. Moreover, the scientific evidence overwhelmingly
demonstrates, as the FWS concedes, that the feeding program is the
underlying cause of many of the alleged threats to the refuge and
Grand Teton National Park; particularly wildlife disease concerns.
“The federal agencies have elected
to favor politics over science and common sense in approving the
management plan,” explains Schubert. “Their need to placate the
WGFD and decision to capitulate to the state’s demands will only
serve to prolong the problems and increase the threats posed by
supplemental feeding.”
AWI is one of this nation’s oldest
animal protection organizations dedicated to reducing the sum total
of pain and fear inflicted on animals by humans. BFC is based in
West Yellowstone, Montana and is the only group working in the field
everyday to stop the slaughter of Yellowstone’s wild free-roaming
buffalo.
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Contact:
D.J. Schubert (AWI) (609-601-2875) |