Mont. in trouble

sremim

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Mont. wildlife commission may cancel bison hunt

01/07/2005

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HELENA, Mont. (AP) -- Montana's wildlife commission agreed Thursday to consider canceling the state's controversial bison hunt set to start next week, and postponed the drawing for 10 bison licenses that was scheduled for today.
The 4-1 decision was made by a commission that included three members appointed just hours earlier by Gov. Brian Schweitzer, who took office this week and said Wednesday he wanted to see the hunt canceled because of the potential for a "public relations nightmare" for the state.

However, in an interview Schweitzer said he was not opposed to bison hunting itself, but the circumstances. He said he wants bison to be hunted like other wildlife, after they have a greater range established on which to roam in Montana, and that could come as early as 2006.

"There will be a significant hunt," Schweitzer said. "There's going to be a hunt next year. I just don't want a black-eye hunt. I don't think we should have the equivalent of shooting refrigerators."

The Fish, Wildlife and Parks Commission plans to meet Monday to make a decision on the fate of what would be Montana's first hunt of bison that leave Yellowstone National Park in more than a decade.

The hunts were canceled in 1991 after a barrage of protests and bad publicity. Revival of hunting, authorized by the 2003 Legislature, was approved by the previous commission last month.

More than 8,000 people have paid $3 apiece to apply for the licenses that would be used in the monthlong season set to begin Jan. 15.

A drawing that had been scheduled for today would determine who would get the licenses -- priced at $75 for residents and $750 for nonresidents

Two members of the commission voiced opposition Thursday to the hunt moving forward.

Tim Mulligan, commissioner from Whitehall and the lone opponent of the hunt last month, said the plan would generate so much bad publicity for the state that it would do more harm than good in efforts to manage the bison that migrate from the park each winter in search of forage.



"There would be a firestorm that could set back the opportunity to hunt bison in Montana," he said, echoing Schweitzer's concerns.

Shane Colton of Billings, one of Schweitzer's appointees, said he does not object to hunting bison as they leave the park, but "this hunt seems more symbolic than anything."

The other new members, Steve Doherty of Great Falls and Vic Workman of Whitefish, did not state their position on a hunt. However, Schweitzer had said Wednesday he could stop the hunt by appointing people to the commission who share his view.

Commissioner John Brenden of Scobey, who voted for the hunt last month, assailed fellow members for caving in to "blackmail" from groups opposed to the hunting of Yellowstone bison, some of whom have threatened to organize a boycott of Montana if the shooting occurs.

"I don't think that it would look good for the new governor, who touted his experiences of hunting and fishing in the press, to cave in to some fringe groups," Brenden, a longtime Republican, said of the Democrat Schweitzer. "We will be hurt in the minds and eyes of a lot of Montana and out-of-state sportsmen."

Mulligan said he is concerned about a repeat of confrontations between bison-protection activists and hunters in the field during the previous hunts.

"We're not caving in to anyone," he said. "We may be putting 10 hunters into a very difficult situation and a very public situation that then may damage our opportunity to hunt."

The previous bison hunts were orchestrated events in which game wardens escorted a hunter to a selected bison. This year's hunt has been called more conventional, with hunters striking out on their own at a time of their own choosing, Hagener explained.

Advocates of hunting see it as another management tool for controlling bison, many of which are infected with brucellosis. Ranchers fear the disease, which causes cows to abort, could be transmitted from bison to cattle, although there are no documented cases of that happening in the wild.

Schweitzer said Wednesday that killing 10 bison will do nothing to stem the growing Yellowstone herd, which has more than doubled to beyond 4,000 in the past six years.

Brenden said he was concerned that canceling the hunt for this year could jeopardize the livestock industry. "We can't afford to take chances ... to have any more potential for entertaining brucellosis into Montana," he said.
 
LAST EDITED ON Jan-07-05 AT 12:27PM (MST)[p]LAST EDITED ON Jan-07-05 AT 12:26?PM (MST)

what a bunch of crap. what would be worse, having a few tourists skip visiting our state because we hunt bison here, or lose our brucellosis-free status and have our cattle industry decimated? ya'd think they could make up the difference in tourists since 80-billion people are supposed to be coming here this summer to see the garbage-laiden trail Lewis and Clark used to "discover" this place.

And now that i've had time to stew on this some more....this is giving ranchers and hunters/outdoorsmen, who contribute more to our economy than anybody else, YEAR-ROUND, a slap in the face. He's coddling tourists first, then telling us that "maybe we'll have it next year". And what is the FWP going to do with all that money used to apply for these tags? And what are they going to do with the INTEREST that money has been generating? Refund it all? Well, maybe when i fill out my apps this year for tags i won't get, i'll short them the "processing fee" and tell them that maybe i'll send in the "extra" next year.
 
As an out of stater, I don't agree that the hunt should be cancelled. But IMHO, 10 bison killed won't do much to protect the brucelosis issue. So I suspect the main issue is someone caving in to fringe groups.

Jeff
 
I agree with Jeff that killing 10 bison probably wouldn't do alot to help the problem. But our new governor appointing 3 new members to the Fish, Wildlife and Parks commission that promptly voted against the hunt that very same day smells. These members and the governor stress that they are not against a hunt,as a matter of fact, the guv wants to apply, but would like it more "free chase" than the current hunting form. I don't know if any of you have been down to Yellowstone and observed the buffalo, but "free chase" isn't going to happen. My guess is the pressure of the antis scared Mr. Schweitzer. You might remember in the early 90's Montana tried a hunt and outraged bunny huggers when they witnessed hunters driving up to a bison and shooting it, usually multiple times. I'd like to kill a bison as much as the next guy, but I have to admit, the last hunt was nothing but a circus. mtmuley
 

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