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Bill In Washington's State House Aims To Delist Gray Wolf

File photo. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife has killed six wolves from the Profanity Peak Pack.
Doug Smith
/
National Park Service
File photo. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife has killed six wolves from the Profanity Peak Pack.

Washington’s House Committee on Agriculture & Natural Resources hosted a public hearing Wednesday on a bill that proposes the partial delisting of wolves from the state’s endangered species list.

The bill would prohibit the state’s Fish and Wildlife Commission from listing the gray wolf as endangered “in any county east of the crest of the Cascade mountains that shares a border with Canada.”

According to the Department of Fish and Wildlife, nearly 80 percent of Washington’s wolves live in the state’s four northeastern-most counties. Conflict between wolves and cattle ranchers there came to a head last summer, so state biologists opted to kill an entire pack.

Bill co-sponsor Joel Kretz, a Republican from Okanogan County, said the state’s Wolf Advisory Groupwould have to develop a plan if wolves are partially delisted.

“I don’t know really what delisting would mean,” Kretz said. “I would think the people that would be involved at the WAG and all the negotiations would sit down at the table and come up with something.”

There is some concern that if wolves are delisted at the state level, wolf hunting could become legal in Washington.

Copyright 2017 Northwest News Network

Emily Schwing started stuffing envelopes for KUER FM90 in Salt Lake City, and something that was meant to be a volunteer position turned into a multi-year summer internship. After developing her own show for Carleton Collegeââââ
Emily Schwing
Emily Schwing comes to the Inland Northwest by way of Alaska, where she covered social and environmental issues with an Arctic spin as well as natural resource development, wildlife management and Alaska Native issues for nearly a decade. Her work has been heard on National Public Radio’s programs like “Morning Edition” and “All things Considered.” She has also filed for Public Radio International’s “The World,” American Public Media’s “Marketplace,” and various programs produced by the BBC and the CBC. She has also filed stories for Scientific American, Al Jazeera America and Arctic Deeply.