The great wolf debate comes to Yakima
Yakima Herald Republic
More 'Local'
- Photo: Ringing in the holidays
- Officer injured in traffic stop gone awry
- President of Pacific Northwest University abruptly leaves
- Snoqualmie Pass shut for avalanche control
- Recount date set in Selah City Council race
- Davis HS grad killed in Las Vegas robbery attempt
- Highway 12 closed tonight for cliff blasting
YAKIMA, Wash. -- With two wolf packs totaling about a dozen animals and more expected in the coming years, Washington state is grappling with a proposed wolf management plan.
Authors of the plan called the process that produced it wrenching and polarizing. In short: a flashpoint issue.
When it comes to attitudes about wolves, there seems to be no middle ground.
Hunters are afraid wolves will decimate elk and deer populations. Ranchers fear the state’s newest alpha predator will wreak havoc on their livestock. Conservationists worry that hunters and ranchers will shoot the wolves despite state or federal protections.
A recently released draft management plan by the state Department of Fish and Wildlife sets minimum standards for downlisting and delisting wolves in Washington, where they are federally protected in the western two-thirds of the state and state-protected across all of Washington.
It provides guidelines for moving wolves to keep their populations at sustainable and manageable limits, dictates how and when wolves may be scared off or killed, and outlines how the state will balance the wolves’ needs with the desires of sportsmen who pay hefty fees to hunt the very deer and elk the wolves do.
It also calls for a generous compensation package for owners whose livestock has been killed by wolves. But even members of the citizens’ working group that devised the plan question where that money will come from.
Several working-group members described the plan as a compromise.
It was “a way to find some common ground,” but doesn’t qualify as a perfect plan for any of them, said Derrick Knowles of Conservation Northwest, which works to preserve wildlife habitat.
Former state wildlife commissioner Bob Tuck of Selah doubts any single group member agreed with all facets of the plan. But he calls it “a good plan ... in a complex wildlife issue, in which society has multiple responsibilities.”
Wolves’ ebb and flow
The state’s two existing wolf packs, the Lookout Pack near Twisp and the Diamond Pack in the state’s northeast corner, are a far cry from the thousands that once lived here.
By the 1930s, aggressive hunting — often with bounties being paid — essentially eliminated gray wolves in Washington. In 1973, they were federally listed as endangered.
After federal reintroduction efforts, the wolf population grew to more than 1,500 in Idaho, Montana and Wyoming over the past 15 years. With thousands more in British Columbia, it was only a matter of time before packs expanded into Washington. There is no clear estimate when wolves might reach the Yakima area.
Not everyone wants a repeat of what has happened in Idaho.
Eric Johnson, a self-described “hard-core hunter” from Pend Oreille County, is adamant that wolves have taken a heavy hit on elk and deer in Idaho and will do the same in Washington. When that happens, he said, the hunters — not the wolves — would pay the price.
“It sounds like (state officials are) going to manage to recover these wolves, and if deer and elk populations get hurt, the first thing they’re going to do is cut the hunting seasons,” Johnson said.
“Wait until (wolves) start showing up in Yakima. Those wolves will be cutting into the biggest herd in the state — that’s when it’ll get people’s attention. It’s out of sight, out of mind, until they show up in your neighborhood. When you’re out hunting and they’re howling in the woods and you haven’t seen an elk in five days, it’ll hit home.”
Effect on deer and elk
But working group member Tommy Petrie, president of the Pend Oreille Sportsmen’s Club, has heard that argument a lot and isn’t convinced.
“I hate to say (wolves) are going to devastate the elk population, but on the other hand I don’t know,” Petrie said, adding that in general, hunter harvest “is still pretty good” in Idaho, Montana and Wyoming — three states in the Northern Rocky Mountains’ regional wolf recovery program.
The wolves have “definitely changed the dynamics of how you go about hunting the elk” in Idaho, he noted. “By (the year) 2000, when we really started seeing wolf activity, you could go to any one of the six or seven different drainages we hunt pretty heavily and you could run into elk sign. Now the tactics change a little bit — you might go through a few different drainages and not find any elk, but when you do find them, it’s the mother lode.”
Working group member Duane Cocking of Newman Lake, near Spokane, said it felt like he, as a hunting advocate, was “fighting city hall the whole time” during the draft-plan process. “The (state wildlife) department definitely wants wolves,” he said. “There’s that worry on my part and on most hunters’ part, that the emphasis would be on recovery of the wolves rather than protection of the deer and elk.
“I’d much prefer to see a hunter harvest an animal than a predator (kill the same animal).”
About the numbers
But when Cocking declared in a working-group meeting that the state wildlife department should be more focused on providing hunting opportunities than on limiting them with an increased predator presence, Tuck disagreed.
“(The wildlife department’s) job by statute is to manage the fish and wildlife and their habitat. That’s their first responsibility. Providing recreational opportunities is secondary,” said Tuck, the former state wildlife commissioner. “And it makes no difference if the department wants wolves or not, because the wolves are here and now we have to manage them.”
But how many should the state manage? The proposed plan calls for a graduated lowering of state-protected status based wolf population expansion, with delisting to take place once the state can document 15 successful breeding pairs for three consecutive years, spread throughout the state.
The 15-pair minimum number is “way too high,” said working-group member Jack Field of the Washington Cattlemen’s Association. “In my opinion, that’s completely out of whack.”
Field also took umbrage with the plan’s allowing livestock owners to kill a wolf only if it’s “in the act” of attacking livestock — biting, wounding or killing — not just chasing or pursuing. “The concern I have is that a livestock producer is going to be prosecuted for illegally killing a wolf,” Field said. “I think that’s one of the key issues that will draw a lot of attention and discussion during the comment period (which lasts until Jan. 8), and perhaps the department will reconsider that.”
Where to from here?
Working-group member Greta M. Wiegand of Seattle said the plan wasn’t “something we can lay down on the table now and walk away from. ... We do not want to end up with a wolf population that is not genetically sound, not enough different wolf families in there. We all hope that will be watched very carefully — nobody wants genetically unsound wolves running around out there. That wouldn’t be good for anybody.”
Whether the state will be able to follow up its ambitious plan with active management, though, is a legitimate question at a time when the wildlife department has had to cut its budget by large chunks. Working-group member John Blankenship, once a regional deputy director with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Department, has his doubts.
“It’s all going to fall on its face, because there’s no money to pay for depredation (repaying ranchers for livestock killed by wolves), and the legislature and the commission haven’t demonstrated they’re going to come up with any,” Blankenship said. “In fact, they kind of laugh when you ask them.”
Whether anybody will be laughing Thursday night, when the state holds its Yakima forum on the plan, is another question entirely.
• Scott Sandsberry can be reached at 509-577-7689 or ssandsberry@yakimaherald.com.
Public forum Thursday
What: Public forum on the state’s proposed plan on the state’s wolf management plan
When: 6:30 p.m. Thursday
Where: Red Lion Hotel Yakima Center, 607 E. Yakima Ave., Yakima
Some key points of the state Department of Fish and Wildlife’s proposed “preferred alternative” wolf conservation and management plan
Population objectives
• Before downlisting the wolves’ status from endangered to threatened: Six successful breeding pairs present for three consecutive years, at least two pairs present in each of the three recovery regions: Eastern Washington; North Cascades; and Southern Cascades/Northwest Coast, which is basically Southwest Washington and the Olympic Peninsula
• From threatened to sensitive: 12 successful breeding pairs for three years, including at least two pairs in each of the Eastern Washington and North Cascades regions, and at least five pairs in the remaining region.
• Delisting: 15 breeding pairs for three years, with the same regional minimums as threatened-to-sensitive.
Moving wolves
The plan calls for transporting wolves to reduce high numbers in over-populated areas or to hasten recovery in other areas of the state.
Keeping wolves at bay
Livestock owners or grazers would be issued permits to use non-lethal forms of harassment, such as rubber bullets. If those efforts fail to stop repeated livestock attacks, lethal methods may be used. But only when evaluated on a case-specific basis, and only incrementally, one or two animals removed initially by state or federal wildlife agents
Upon wolves being delisted from threatened to sensitive, the state may permit livestock owners to kill a limited number of wolves on their property or grazing areas.
Compensation
The plan recommends compensating owners of confirmed and likely wolf-killed livestock. But where that money would come from is unclear and several members of the wolf working group say there’s no money to pay for this part of the plan.
The touchiest subjects
Deer and Elk: If wolves are not meeting recovery objectives and lack of prey animals, such as deer and elk is the problem, the state might lower hunting harvest.
Livestock owners can kill a wolf “in the act” of attacking livestock, but that means the wolf must be biting, wounding or killing the livestock animal. If the wolf is just chasing or pursuing the animal, that’s not enough to warrant lethal action.
— Scott Sandsberry
The wildlife people can say otherwise, but the wolf population of Washington was never zero. I saw on on the Pacific Crest Trail between White and Chinook Passes the summer of 1981. Having been raised on a ranch, I know it was no coyote.
As far as the wolves killing off all the deer and elk, I'm sure there are more deer and elk killed on the states highways then the wolves will ever kill.
They're supposed to be here. God put them here for a reason.
The "Wolves" are unaccountable and have made new packs. I ran into a new pack on the closed reservation while doing contract work. They have attacked me and my crew. I am aware of the Wolf population all my life. I seen my best friend give his life for me and my crew. That friend was my dog. He fought so we can get to the truck safely. So,I lived in the mountains mostly all my life. I do have non-enrolled member friends that hiked the Pacific Crest Trail. Not just in this state. I lived in the mountains due to being homeless. I seen what these PLANTED WOLVES have done. I seen how great thier packs are. To be a hunter and then be hunted as a prey. I was young when the state and the tribal goverment officials went ahead and planted these TIMBER WOLVES. Now, they don't know how many packs there is in the washington state. I heard them say that to me. I am no little kid anymore. This is a situation that has gone unattended and passed over with no ethical approach to the real question at hand. "What is the state, local, and tribal officials going to do to the OVER POPULATION of the Wolves?" I can't even go huckleberry picking and camping with my loved ones without staying up at night knowing that they just took over the camping sites. Because, there is hardly anyone actively patrolling the area for the safety of the visitors that go up to the mountains for recreaction purposes in state parks, and the closed Yakama Nation. Even the Cougars and Bears are roaming the small rural towns of Washington because they are being bullied by the packs of Wolves. Now, a Wolverine is seen in the state. We have kids and families going up to the mountains for family vactions. Even in the winter. I don't want to resort to teaching my little ones to bear arms so they can enjoy snow sledding and snowmobiling. Let alone Ice fishing. I shot a Elk and to see a pack claim it before I can get to it. Now, that is not safe. I hope this meeting will see aspects of the victims that these wolves have committed to PUSH AROUND. What is it going to take for these officials and wildlife officers and predetor biologists to come up with a solution to deal with this dangerous issue of the WOLVES that has been greatfully dismissed as stray dogs. Come on these animals are KILLERS. They are bigger than my dog and he was a Golden Lab. I lost my best friend. Endangered wolves. God put these animals here. That is True. But, what about all of us that are not WOLVES ????
Report ViolationSciPhiMom- From what I have seen, they aren't saying they are the first wolves in the state--it's the first confirmed breeding *pack* since their virtual expiration decades ago. A few lone animals have always wandered in. I know, scientists are always clarifying with more info than any really human needs to know, and it doesn't always make it through the game of "Telephone" that can be the press :)
I am excited to know the ecosystem is returning to balance. Some studies have even shown that pronghorn populations have increased when wolves return, and for sure it helps streamside ecosystems when deer and elk have to learn to act like deer and elk again instead of free for all all you can eat browsers with no fear! If you ever get the chance, I recommend the film Lords of Nature.
I was raised in Yakima and now reside in NW Montana.. I have a pretty good idea of what happens when the government re-introduces wolves to an ecosystem. Recent studies say that a single wolf will kill 3 deer per week. That accounts for approximately 156 deer per animal per year. Montana residents have always had a good whitetail harvest, but in the past 2 years that has dropped significantly. FWP officials say that it is because of bad winters in the past two years, but those of us that hunt know the truth.. We had record snowfall in the winter of 96-97 and our fawn to doe counts were 27 to 100 the following spring... this spring, after relatively normal winters, our fawn count was down to 24 per 100 does. The only difference is that our wolf packs have grown by 30% in each of the past couple years. Yes we have grizzly,black bear, and cougar, but these animals have lived in relative balance with the deer and elk population. Now we are being told that as the elk and deer numbers drop, the wolf population will come into balance with the food supply... Where is the sport hunter going to fall into this senario? Because Montana is being forced to take the Grizzly and the Wolf our hunting opportunities are becoming devestated. When we hunt we can see the tracks from large packs in areas that formally had good populations of deer. I guess when the elk and deer are in balance with the wolf, the wolves will move on to Idaho, and Washington... Good Luck with that Washington!
Report Violation
Posting Guidelines - Updated Aug. 21 2009
Readers are encouraged to use these forums to discuss issues affecting the
Yakima Valley. Debate the ideas presented in stories and other comments, but
refrain from personal attacks and offensive remarks aimed at others; e.g.,
you may call an idea idiotic, but don't say the person is an idiot. The
Herald-Republic reserves the right to remove any comment for any reason.
Examples include material that is obscene, encourages illegal activity or
stereotypes based on race, gender, sexual orientation, religious beliefs and
other factors. Continued violation of these guidelines can lead to
suspension or revocation of your ability to post comments. If you believe a
comment is inappropriate, you can bring it to our attention by clicking the
"report violation" link by each comment. Guidelines revised Aug. 21, 2009.
Registered User?

RSS
E-mail
Print
Comments