Tag Archives: wolf management

Appeals court to hear request for emergency injunction against Idaho & Montana wolf hunts

From today’s Missoulian . . .

With more than 150 wolves shot in the Northern Rockies so far this fall, a panel of federal judges on Tuesday is scheduled to consider an emergency halt to public hunts for the animals.

Congress cleared the way for the hunts last spring, when lawmakers took the unprecedented step of stripping Endangered Species Act protections from more than 1,300 wolves in Montana and Idaho.

Wildlife advocates sued to reverse the move and want the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to suspend the hunt while the case is pending. They claim Congress violated the Constitution’s separation of powers mandate by reversing prior court rulings that kept protections in place.

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Wolf hunt totals 44 animals so far

Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks released end-of-month totals for hunting season so far. The Daily Inter Lake has the story, including the wolf numbers . . .

So far this hunting season, hunters have taken 44 wolves in Montana.

The overall statewide quota is 220 wolves spread across 16 hunting districts.

In Northwest Montana’s six districts, a total of 17 wolves have been harvested; the quota of allowable wolf kills is 71.

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Montana’s wolf hunt opens this Saturday

Idaho started their wolf hunt the other day, now it’s Montana’s turn. From the Daily Inter Lake . . .

Wolves will be legal game when archery season opens Saturday, but successful hunts are expected to be very rare…

Montana has set a statewide quota for 220 wolves to be harvested this year during the archery season, the early rifle season in wilderness areas and the general big game season that opens in late October…

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Ninth Circuit denies motion to bar Montana and Idaho wolf hunts

From an AP article posted to today’s Flathead Beacon . . .

A federal appeals court on Thursday denied a request by environmental groups to halt wolf hunts that are scheduled to begin next week in Idaho and Montana.

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals denied the request by the Alliance for the Wild Rockies and other groups. The groups were seeking to cancel the hunts while the court considers a challenge to congressional action in April that stripped wolves of federal protections in Montana and Idaho, and in parts of Washington, Oregon and Utah.

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Groups ask for emergency injunction to halt wolf hunts in Montana and Idaho

From the Daily Inter Lake . . .

Environmentalists have asked a federal appeals court for an emergency injunction to halt wolf hunts scheduled to start in a few weeks in Idaho and Montana.

The request filed by the Alliance for the Wild Rockies and other groups with the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals was made public Saturday. The groups want the hunts canceled until the court issues a decision in an appeal filed Monday challenging a federal judge’s ruling allowing the hunts to go forward.

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Federal judge upholds delisting of wolves in Montana and Idaho

From the Missoulian . . .

Strongly disagreeing with his own decision, U.S. District Court Judge Donald Molloy on Wednesday upheld a congressional rider removing gray wolves from Endangered Species Act protection.

Barring a successful appeal, the decision means wolves are delisted in Montana and Idaho, and those states may go ahead with their scheduled wolf hunting seasons this fall.

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Related story: Groups to appeal wolf ruling to 9th Circuit

Amendment removing gray wolves from Endangered Species Act protection faces court challenge

From today’s Missoulian . . .

The congressional rider removing gray wolves from Endangered Species Act protection faces a court challenge in Missoula on Tuesday.

The Alliance for the Wild Rockies, Center for Biological Diversity, Friends of the Clearwater and WildEarth Guardians together claim Congress violated the U.S. Constitution’s separation of powers doctrine when it ordered the wolf delisted and blocked future court review of that decision.

In response, attorneys for Interior Secretary Ken Salazar say Congress has frequently rewritten laws to get around court rulings, and courts have endorsed the practice.

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Wolf management pioneer Carolyn Sime leaving Montana FWP

From yesterday’s Missoulian . . .

Carolyn Sime, a pioneer in wolf management in Montana, is leaving her job with Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks in order to pursue a law degree.

“After 10 years of late-night phone calls, ranch meetings and 20 years of game check stations, I’m ready to try something new,” Sime said this week. “But I leave with some really, really fond memories of the relationships we’ve made and the work toward finding common ground, having open dialogues and civil discussions.”

For more than a decade, Sime was in the epicenter of the wolf management controversy…

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Montana sets quota of 220 wolves for Fall hunt

From an AP article posted in today’s Flathead Beacon . . .

Hunters will be able to shoot as many as 220 gray wolves in Montana this fall under rules adopted Thursday by state wildlife commissioners.

The hunt is scheduled to begin in early September and is expected to reduce the predator’s Montana population by about 25 percent to 425 wolves.

A wolf hunt is also planned in Idaho, where officials have not proposed statewide harvest targets or quotas.

Wolves were taken off the endangered species list in an unprecedented move by Congress this spring in Montana, Idaho and parts of Utah, Washington and Oregon.

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Federal officials to visit Wyoming to talk wolves

Looks like Wyoming is slowly edging towards a deal with the feds on wolf management. From today’s Missoulian . . .

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar is headed to Wyoming to meet with Gov. Matt Mead and others to discuss removing wolves from the endangered list in the state.

Sen. John Barrasso says Daniel Ashe, President Barack Obama’s nominee to lead the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, also will be traveling to Wyoming.

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