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Drive ends: December 31, 2024

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Audubon Supports Carbon Tax I-732, Urges Action on Climate Change to Save Bird Populations

Birds exist everywhere we do, so it’s little wonder that they have been important to human culture from time immemorial. Their songs thrill along with their incredible display of speed and strength. Audubon has been dedicated to ensuring their survival since it was founded in 1905. From its work in stopping the sale of feathers of native birds for the fashion industry, to the ban of DDT in 1972, the organization has been on the front lines of conservation and grassroots advocacy. In this bird-rich radio feature, Martha Baskin takes a look at Audubon’s work in Washington state and why they support I-732, the carbon tax.

Check out KBCS’s recent discussion on I-732 here.

Amid Controversy, State and Stakeholders Uphold WA Wolf Management Plan

When Washington state wildlife officials announced they would eliminate the Profanity Peak wolf pack last month, they were operating under a new management plan. The plan came about after months of deliberation with various stakeholders ranging from livestock producers to conservation groups. But there were some parties left out of the discussion. Correspondent Emily Schwing reports.

Donny Martorello is in charge of the state’s Wolf Policy. He says ultimately, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife is a “conservation organization.”

“We wouldn’t be removing a wolf pack if we believed at all that there was a conservation impact or an impact of recovery of the species in Washington.”

He says the state’s decision to eliminate Profanity Peak wolves is in keeping with protocols that were agreed to by nearly twenty stakeholders that make up the state’s Wolf Advisory Group, or WAG. Among them is Washington-based wildlife and wildlands conservation group Conservation Northwest. Spokesman Chase Gunnell calls the state’s management plan “the best in the nation.”

“It requires ranchers to conduct conflict avoidance measures and other measures to reduce or prevent depredations and it allows as a last result the lethal removal of wolves and we that plan as a whole is better from other states. It’s learned from the experiences in the Rockies and elsewhere and we are proud to support it.”

WAG members include cattle and sheep ranchers, private citizens and other conservation and animal rights groups like Defenders of Wildlife and the Human Society of the United States.

But some organizations believe WAG members have compromised too much when it comes to wolf recovery and conservation.

Roughly 80 people gathered at the state capitol to protest the state’s decision to shoot and kill the entire Profanity Peak Wolf Pack.

Amaroq Weiss is the West Coast Wolf Organizer for the Center for Biological Diversity. It’s one organization that is not represented among the 18 members of the WAG:

“The fact is we have seen this over the years, wherever there are wolves, when groups are coming to the table and compromising to that degree, wolves are the losers.”

There are other groups that have also been left out of the conversation.

An elder from Western Washington’s Cowlitz Indian tribe complained that exterminating the wolf pack violates native American treaty and religions rights. According to the Attorney General’s Office, Washington’s Department of Fish and Wildlife is operating in compliance with federal and state law.

As for tribes, “there are no tribal courts that have any subject matter jurisdiction over these management actions,” wrote Niel Wise, Senior Counsel for the Attorney General, in a letter dated August 29th.

The US Government and tribal leaders signed treaties in the 1850’s so that tribal law applies on tribal land. Essentially, Indian reservations are independent nations.

The Profanity Peak wolf pack’s territory is just north of the Colville Indian Reservation. Vice Tribal Chairman Mel Tonasket says the tribe has their own wolf management plan:

“So, basically what we’re saying is ‘state, you have your plan and tribes, tribes have our plan and we hope we recognize each other’s jurisdiction and sovereignty.”

Washington’s stakeholders plan to review that state’s wolf management protocols this winter. In Oregon, state wildlife officials also heard from stakeholders. A 2010 report describes those comments as “highly polarized.” The state killed four Oregon wolves from the Imnaha pack last spring. Idaho’s wolf management plan allows ranchers to kill wolves that kill their cattle.

 

You can find more information on Washington’s Wolf Conservation and Management Plan here.

The 2010 Oregon report mentioned in the story can be found here.