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Big Game Forever Launches Campaign to Delist Wolves

As published in The Outdoor Wire
Wednesday, August 4, 2010
 
Big Game Forever Launches Campaign to Delist Wolves
As a judge in Montana considers whether to permit Montana and Idaho to continue hunts to manage mushrooming wolf populations that have decimated big game herds, Defenders of Wildlife has sought to triple the number of wolves in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming and the Center for Biological Diversity has petitioned Interior Secretary Salazar and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to provide for expansion of wolf populations across the entire United States.

In response to these actions and the strong grassroots desire of sportsmen, outfitters, ranchers, and many others all across the US to insure that wolves are de-listed from the Endangered Species List and managed by all states where they are found, Big Game Forever, a political action arm of nationally-respected organization Sportsmen for Fish and Wildlife, has drafted legislation to remove wolves from the Endangered Species List. Big Game Forever is now working with a growing number of Congressmen and Senators to have the bill introduced early in 2011. The bill will allow needed wolf management measures to stop the decline of some of the West's and upper Midwest's most important herds of elk, moose and deer and help rebuild those herds.

"The decision to remove wolves, one of North America's most abundant and successful predators, from the endangered species list by both the Bush and Obama administrations will not be respected by animal rights and a handful of environmental groups, even though excessive predation on big game has caused at least $100 million damage to the economies of states where wolves are found," says Ryan Benson, National Director for Big Game Forever.

"Wolves are being exploited in an attempt to remove the rights of sportsmen to have access to and use of renewable wildlife resources. Notwithstanding the experimental nature of wolf reintroductions and repeated declarations that wolf populations have expanded far beyond recovery objectives, these groups continue to make millions of dollars suing the federal government on technicalities within the Endangered Species Act. It has become clear that there will be no end to the litigation despite the unprecedented damage to wildlife, surplus killing of livestock, and attacks on pets and guard dogs in the West and Upper Midwest. Ultimately those most affected by the ongoing litigation continue to be Sportsmen and wildlife, including the very wolves the anti-sporting groups proclaim to protect," Benson says.

The federal government is currently spending $3.7 million dollars yearly to remove problem wolves that kill domestic livestock in Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Oregon, Washington, New Mexico, Arizona and Utah. This is money that should be used for wildlife conservation, including restoration of elk, moose, wild sheep and deer that have been decimated by rapidly-expanding wolf populations in many areas, Big Game Forever asserts.

The proposed legislation will provide assurances of agreed upon wolf population numbers in states where experimental reintroductions have reached sustainable populations spelled out in original enabling mandates. "State wildlife managers can either manage for abundance or scarcity," explains Benson. "In the last 10 years, sportsmen have contributed $20 Billion in federal wildlife funding in an attempt to restore healthy big game populations and waterfowl populations. In addition to federal funding, State wildlife agencies, which are largely if not exclusively funded by sportsmen's dollars, spend hundreds of millions annually in the West to restore and protect habitat, and manage wildlife populations."

"Sportsmen have worked tirelessly and put their money where their mouth is in an effort to restore healthy wildlife herds to the West," says Don Peay founder of Sportsmen for Fish and Wildlife http://www.sfwsfh.org/. "Decades-long recovery efforts by states and sportsmen's groups are being erased in herd after herd. We will not stand by and watch our efforts wasted by an anti-management agenda that has proved to be a failure for elk, moose and even the wolves they proclaim to protect." Congressional intervention provides a mechanism to ensure that states can fulfill their mandate to manage all wildlife populations for the use of its citizens. Benson explains, "Wolves are here to stay. The same state agencies that successfully manage balanced numbers of mountain lions, bears and other large predators are well-positioned to maintain balanced numbers of gray wolves while protecting abundant prey populations."
To document the groundswell of support for wolf de-listing, Big game Forever has launched an online petition at http://biggameforever.org that has already drawn thousands of signers. Some of the early supporters of the petition include entertainer Jeff Foxworthy, former NBA all-star player Karl Malone, Hall of Fame baseball player Wade Boggs, President of Hoyt Archery Randy Walk, Randy and Coni Brooks of Barnes Bullets, and David Allen, CEO of the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation.

ABOUT BIG GAME FOREVER.org
For the last 15 years, Sportsmen for Fish and Wildlife has endeavored to restore abundant wildlife populations in the West. SFW has worked tirelessly to reintroduce Bison, Big Horn Sheep, Elk and Mountain Goats to their original habitat while also putting millions of dollars on the ground across the West to restore almost 1,000,000 acres of habitat. Big Game Forever was created in 2010 to facilitate political action. Big Game Forever and Sportsmen for Fish and Wildlife believe that protecting the western way of life can only be accomplished through the involvement of American Sportsmen in the political and legal process.
Contact:
Ryan Benson ryandbenson@msn.com (801) 870-5307


Editorial Opinion - Published by the Salt Lake Tribune

Most human societies have evolved past the point where hunting was the job of every man in the tribe. Today, hunting is a sport. And some Utahns believe that the alpha males and females in the tribe are taking more than their share simply because they have more clams than all the other hunters.

Sunday's Tribune profiled how big-game hunters pay up to $79,000 at auction for a special permit to hunt a trophy animal -- a Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep, mountain goat, elk, moose, mule deer, bison, pronghorn, cougar, bear or turkey. Ponying up thousands of dollars entitles the hunter to pursue a trophy animal in the most desirable game areas of the state.

The average Joe, by contrast, may have to wait years to win the right in a lottery to hunt certain species in certain areas, and may never have the good fortune to draw a permit.

The other half of this story, though, is that the $1 million or so the Division of Wildlife Resources earns from the auctions annually allows the agency to purchase wildlife habitat and transplant animals into and within the state. DWR officials point out that these programs benefit not only the populations of animals all other hunters and wildlife lovers enjoy, but they make life better for species of non-game critters as well. So, while with one hand the policy of auctioning trophy permits is turning hunting into the sport of kings, or at those with princely incomes, with the other hand it is helping a much broader group of people, hunters and non-hunters alike.

If the rest of Utah's hunters don't like the idea of the capitalist elite buying trophy permits at huge prices, there are other options, but none of them is particularly attractive. The DWR could simply drop the auction program, but that would kill off valuable habitat preservation and management programs because of lack of funds. The DWR could raise the prices of tags for everyone to make up the difference, but that would do more to price the hunter of humble means out of the sport than does the status quo.

Another alternative would be to look for general government revenues to pay for wildlife programs. For years, hunters have paid the bills for wildlife management through their license fees and taxes on ammunition and outdoor gear. People who oppose hunting on ethical grounds complain that the DWR listens only to hunters, but it is natural for the agency to listen to the folks who are paying the bills.

Since state governments are struggling today with budget deficits and an economic recession, it is not realistic to expect them to come up with bigger contributions for wildlife management from general revenues. State income-tax check-offs to raise funds for non-consumptive wildlife have been a bust.

But if non-hunters are serious about funding wildlife management and habitat preservation, maybe they should propose taxes on water or real estate that would benefit wildlife directly. After all, every drop of water or square foot of ground that is taken for human use reduces resources for wildlife.

Until reforms like this are enacted, auctions for coveted big-game tags may remain the best shot at preserving wildlife and hunting for the everyday member of the tribe.

Copyright 2001, Salt Lake Tribune


'07 Utah Legislative Summary

2007 Utah Legislative Session A $12 Million Success. Over $12 Million in NEW funding for Wildlife Conservation Results from the 2007 Session. This Sportsmen’s Voice is being heard loud and clear on Utah’s Capitol Hill  and the power of our collective voice is the reason hunting and fishing will get better, not worse, in Utah. $6.5 Million General Tax Money for Elk and Deer Habitat Conservation.

This is NEW MONEY being built into base budgets; money that will be there every year for years to come! $2.5 Million for elk and deer habitat restoration on federal lands, $2 Million for habitat restoration on private rangelands, and $2 Million for conservation easements on critical private lands. SFH will go after some of these funds for the SFH Cache Valley Winter Range Initiative. $500,000 for federal land projects was actually built into base budget last year, brining the new total for federal lands to $2.5 Million per year. $5 Million Additional DWR Operation Revenue  License Decrease for 30% of Hunters, License Increase for 70% of Hunters Impacts on ‘08 Drawing Odds for Limited Entry and Once-in-a Lifetime Permits.

The DWR license restructuring bill passed and will provide the DWR with approximately $5 Million a year in additional operational funds. For hunters who buy elk, deer, and combination licenses, there will actually be a license decrease. Hunters who only contribute $10 to apply for once-in-a-lifetime and limited draw permits (all $10 goes to a computer company in Nevada and NO money goes to produce wildlife) will be required to purchase a $26 license before applying for limited and once-in-a-lifetime permits, and the application fee will increase to $10 each applicant. 10 Year School Trust Lands Access Agreement for 3.5 Million Acres - $500,000 in General Fund to Pay the Bill. A HUGE issue for public land sportsmen, the DWR and the School Trust Lands signed a 10-year agreement that will provide the school children of Utah $500,000 a year, and in return, there will be NO leasing of school trust lands to outfitters for CWMU-type hunts on trust lands.

The general public hunters shall have free access to these 3.5 million acres of Trust Lands. There were also significant additions to the agreement that will protect DWR grazing permits for wildlife. No elk shooting parks will be allowed on Trust Lands. Finally, the $500,000 payment for the 2008 payment comes from General Funds and NOT license money.

Formation of Utah Sportsmen’s Caucus With help from the Congressional Sportsmen’s Caucus, Utah became the 30th state to officially form a State Sportsmen’s Caucus. Senator Allen Christensen, a Grand Slam sheep hunter, together with Senator Margaret Dayton and Representatives Mike Noel and Jim Gowans chair this caucus. It was formed on a motion by Senate President John Valentine. Coyote Control, Fish Hatchery Repair, Turkey Transplant Funding Continues From past legislative actions there are millions of dollars set aside for coyote control, rebuilding fish hatcheries, improving DWR winter range areas, transplanting turkeys and chukar, and more. These funds are NOT included in the above new funding sources.

 


Trust officials strike deal with state on land swap

Tuesday, March 6, 2007

Spat spills over into D.C.; Utah's congressional delegation reintroduces House, Senate measures By Robert Gehrke, The Salt Lake Tribune

WASHINGTON - A spat over hunting access on school trust lands spilled into Washington as concerns from hunters groups and intervention from Rep. Jim Matheson threatened to stall a proposed land swap that trust-land officials have been pushing for years.

The dust-up centered on two issues: whether hunters would be assured access to prime deer and elk habitat in the Book Cliffs that the Utah School and Institutional Trust Lands Administration (SITLA) would acquire in the proposed land swap, and how much the state would pay SITLA for hunting and recreation access on 3.2 million acres of trust lands.

"I made it real clear that I wanted the situation resolved," Matheson said, before moving ahead on the land exchange bill.

It took some maneuvering, but SITLA and the state struck a deal that ultimately guarantees that access to the wildlife on the trust lands will continue. "All in all it was a good agreement for wildlife," said Jim Karpowitz, director of the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources. "We're anxious to see [the land exchange] go now."

The school trust lands are scattered parcels around the state that are managed to generate funds primarily for Utah's schools.

Ten years ago, the state Division of Wildlife Resources began paying SITLA $200,000 to open the trust lands to hunters. But with that deal due to expire in September, SITLA came to the state with a new price: $1.3 million. And if the state wouldn't pay, there would likely be private interests that would, and then charge hunters for access.

SITLA Director Kevin Carter said his agency wasn't threatening the state, but suggested it was "a scenario that we could envision" and one that SITLA would consider.

The state offered $500,000 for the access to the wildlife habitat. In the meantime, hunters raised concerns about the management of big-game habitat in the Book Cliffs that SITLA was seeking to acquire as part of a 91,000-acre land swap.

The land exchange would transfer 47,000 acres of school trust lands in Grand, Uintah and San Juan counties - environmentally sensitive areas near Arches National Park, Dinosaur National Monument and Corona and Morning Glory arches - to the federal government.

In exchange, SITLA would get about 44,000 acres of BLM land with oil, gas, agricultural and other development, as well as the prime hunting range in the Book Cliffs.

The House approved the swap last year, but it bogged down in the Senate, meaning it would have started over this year. Matheson, however, told both sides that he wouldn't reintroduce the bill until SITLA the state and the hunters had reached an agreement on both access issues. "Sportsmen of the state were adamantly opposed to any land exchange between the state and federal agencies until SITLA decided to be a good citizen in the community and find a win-win solution for the school kids and sportsmen," said Don Peay, founder of the group Sportsmen for Fish and Wildlife. On Feb. 16, SITLA and the Division of Wildlife Resources announced they had struck a deal.

The state would pay SITLA $500,000 beginning Sept. 1, and the fee would increase 5 percent over the next decade.

At the same time, SITLA put in writing a guarantee that there would be perpetual access to the wildlife range in the Book Cliffs.

The issues resolved, Matheson reintroduced the land exchange legislation last week. Rep. Chris Cannon, R-Utah, is co-sponsoring the measure. Sens. Bob Bennett and Orrin Hatch introduced the land exchange bill in the Senate in January.

"We hope that there is recognition that we have worked through these issues and we're ready to move ahead now," Carter said.


Favorable game-management practices have given Utah's elk population a big boost and helped make the state a hot spot for record-worthy racksBy Brett Prettyman - The Salt Lake Tribune

Big bulls became a common sight for Utah elk hunters... (The Salt Lake Tribune File Photo) The numbers don't lie. When it comes to finding big bull elk sporting gnarly - even prehistoric-looking - trophy-sized racks, Utah is the place. The Boone and Crockett Club, the official record-keepers of big-game trophies of North America, reported that from 2000 to 2006, no other state produced more record-book bulls than Utah. "It is pretty well known that hunters who want the best chance of taking a big bull come here," said Jim Karpowitz, director of the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources (DWR). "Thanks to some thoughtful people, we have made some pretty good management decisions on elk programs throughout the years. Those programs have made Utah the premier state for elk in the nation." Utah has produced seven of the top 50 typical bulls - ones with symmetrical antlers on both sides - of all time since 2003, including No. 4 on the list. A new state record nontypical bull was taken in 2002 and just last week a nontypical bull was dropped that will likely make the top 10 of all time. Getting the state's elk herds to this lofty status is not only good for hunters. More elk are visible across the state for a growing number of wildlife watchers. And high prices for limited elk hunting permits bolster state wildlife efforts at a time when hunting - and the key revenue it provides the DWR - is in decline. Utah's Rocky Mountain elk population numbered between 12,000 and 15,000 when Karpowitz started working as a big-game biologist 29 years ago. There are now close to 64,000 elk in Utah, a figure based on 2006 post-hunting season projections. Biologists have set an objective of 68,000 elk, with an overall goal of 80,000. Elk drew 31,656 hunters to the field, primarily to public lands, late last summer and fall, second only to the deer hunt. For Bill Christensen, Utah field director of the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, funding has been key to the success. The nonprofit foundation, which just celebrated its 20th anniversary in Utah, reports that its 14 chapters and more than 4,000 members have "conserved or enhanced" more than 735,000 acres of wildlife habitat in the state at a cost of nearly $21 million. "When you spend money on a habitat project it benefits not only elk and many other species, but also livestock owners," said Christensen. "One of the biggest problems in growing the Utah herds was that the agricultural groups were opposed to elk. They thought the only good elk was a dead elk. Through habitat efforts they saw that the grazing for their livestock was better and private landowners also realized if they made efforts to foster elk they could also make some money in permits, money that often helped them hold onto the land rather than having to sell it."
Through the state's Cooperative Wildlife Management Unit program, Utah landowners can sell a certain number of big-game hunting permits, as determined by state biologists based on habitat conditions and herd populations. The landowners in return must provide 10 percent of the overall total permits to the public. Some of these elk permits can go for as much as $12,000. Public elk permits through the program cost $280 and are awarded by a drawing. Higher herd numbers and controlled hunts produce big bulls, which some hunters will pay top dollar for a chance to pursue. Utah's 2007 statewide elk conservation permit, which allows hunters to pursue elk on any open unit, drew a high bid of $100,000 in January; former Jazzman and future NBA Hall of Famer, Karl Malone paid $50,000 for a permit on a single unit known to harbor trophy-sized elk. Money isn't the only ticket to success. Aron Hall-Terracciano, a 15-year-old from Washington, lucked out and had his name drawn from 6,806 entries to win the coveted 2007 Sportsman's elk tag. His dad paid $5 to enter Aron in the drawing (the teenager didn't even know about the hunt until his father explained it to him) and then $280 for the elk tag. Aron filled the Sportsman's tag Sept. 1 when he took a bull scoring an impressive 372 Boone and Crockett points on the same unit Malone paid $50,000 to hunt this fall. "It was a really great experience. It was my first big-game animal and it was really fun to be with my dad and brother when it happened," Aron said. Elk history in Utah Wildlife officials believe that elk and bighorn sheep were the dominant big-game species in the state before pioneers and miners arrived. Uncontrolled hunting pushed elk numbers to low levels by the end of the 1800s and, according to the DWR's Statewide Elk Management Plan, the first restrictions were applied in 1898. An intensive effort to augment and expand the state's herds took place from 1912 to 1925, with animals being relocated from Yellowstone National Park and Montana to Utah locales including Fish Lake, the Oquirrh Mountains, Mount Nebo, Logan Canyon and Mount Timpanogos. Elk were managed under a limited-entry hunt until 1967 when the state began applying changes to allow hunters to take young bulls and cultivate trophies at the same time. Karpowitz and Christensen agree that the No. 1 concern for Utah's elk population is loss or destruction of habitat. "We need to continue to utilize partnerships to secure as much habitat as we can. If there is no land, there will be no elk," Christensen said. The state Elk Management Plan identifies uncontrolled off-highway vehicle use as another issue, pointing out that illegal riding can destroy critical big game habitat and disturb wildlife populations. Another concern is disease. Chronic wasting disease has yet to be detected in Utah elk, although it is already affecting some deer populations. Brucellosis, tuberculosis, blue tongue and epizootic hemorrhagic disease, affecting elk herds elsewhere in the Western U.S., are also of concern. Reaping the benefits Big bulls became common for Utah elk hunters around the mid-1990s and record-breakers started to show up at the new millennium. It was a bull taken in 2002 by Grantsville resident Jeff Didericksen, who had also drawn the Sportsman's elk tag against heavy odds, that really got the attention of national elk hunters. Doyle Moss, of MossBack Outfitters, led Didericksen to the bull in late December 2002. Didericksen described the animal as "prehistoric." The bull ended up netting 412 Boone and Crockett points. Moss did it again last fall, leading Ron Skoronski to a new state record typical bull that gave Utah a top-five all-time trophy. "There is just a magic about elk. People really love them and not just hunters," Karpowitz said. "They are the state animal, they are on our new Division of Wildlife Resources logo and they are by far the No. 1 species of interest in the state." --- * BRETT PRETTYMAN can be contacted at brettp@sltrib.com or 801-257-8902. Record-breakers * UTAH'S ELK RECORDS continue to fall like autumn leaves. * THE TYPICAL ELK - symmetrical antlers on both sides - record was broken three times in 2006, with the final high mark a monster bull taken by Ron Skoronski. His bull turned up a net score of 428 6/8 Boone and Crockett points and, when finalized, will be the fourth-highest-scoring typical bull ever taken. * OVERALL, UTAH HAS PRODUCED seven top 50 typical bulls since 2003, and four in the top 25 of all time in the same time frame. * NEWS FROM THE WOODS is that MossBack Guides and Outfitters, which helped turn up the state nontypical - not symmetrical - record in 2002, has done it again. * A BULL TAKEN by a MossBack client last week is reported to have scored 443 gross Boone and Crockett points. The antlers will have to go through a 60-day drying period for a final net score, but it will likely end up in the top 10 of all time and easily become the new Utah record. Hardware Ranch Elk Festival * THE 8TH ANNUAL Elk Festival at Hardware Ranch is Oct. 13 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. * THE FAMILY FRIENDLY EVENT provides a variety of elk-themed activities at the Division of Wildlife Resources property in Blacksmith Canyon in Cache County. * FOR DIRECTIONS and more information, visit www.wildlife.utah.gov/hardwareranch/


 
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