Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
It is unfortunate there is a not a stop gap that says "wolves are already here, let's see how that plays out first" before we spend money and time importing more.Submitted a comment. I’m adamantly anti-wolf in Colorado. Don’t get me wrong, wolves are awesome and I love the idea of getting to see them and interact with them in the wild. But the reality of what wolf reintroduction brings (use of time and money to manage them, endless lawsuits, livestock depredation, lack of management via hunting/trapping, etc) has me against this.
Plus it seems like a waste, since wolves are already making Colorado home without the meddling of humans.
@Oak, any talking points or verbiage you would like us to focus on in commenting here? Not asking you to do the work for me, just sounds like you have a firmer grasp and I'd rather leave impactful comments. I'd like to make sure our management takes into account what we've already seen in MT, ID, WY and act accordinglySome context if folks aren't aware, to help you make substantive comments (the only kind FWS will consider). CPW has requested that FWS issue a 10(j) rule designating the reintroduced population as an experimental population. This will give CPW broader management latitude after wolves hit the ground, including the ability to allow livestock producers to lethally remove predating wolves. This EIS is not going to influence the effort to reintroduce wolves. It's going to influence how they are managed once they are here.
I guess it depends on whether one supports the Service's issuance of a 10(j) rule. As I said, CPW has asked for it so that they have broader management discretion. It will potentially reduce impacts to stakeholders and perhaps increase acceptance and overall success of the program. In general, if you support a proposed action you can usually find your talking points within the scoping notice, as the agency informs the public of why they are proposing the action.@Oak, any talking points or verbiage you would like us to focus on in commenting here? Not asking you to do the work for me, just sounds like you have a firmer grasp and I'd rather leave impactful comments. I'd like to make sure our management takes into account what we've already seen in MT, ID, WY and act accordingly
Looks like I might have misunderstood the proposal.Some context if folks aren't aware, to help you make substantive comments (the only kind FWS will consider). CPW has requested that FWS issue a 10(j) rule designating the reintroduced population as an experimental population. This will give CPW broader management latitude after wolves hit the ground, including the ability to allow livestock producers to lethally remove predating wolves. This EIS is not going to influence the effort to reintroduce wolves. It's going to influence how they are managed once they are here.
I think the same could be said for Idaho, Wyoming and Montana. They were all 10j and look at the mess getting them delisted was after they well exceeded delisting goals. I don’t think it’s a stretch to think they would still be listed if it wasn’t for the congressional delistingStudy up on the “experimental nonessential “ population of “red wolves” they stablished here in NC
Just recommend caution with believing what they say on controls
I think the same could be said for Idaho, Wyoming and Montana. They were all 10j and look at the mess getting them delisted was after they well exceeded delisting goals. I don’t think it’s a stretch to think they would still be listed if it wasn’t for the congressional delisting
I wish Colorado luck and support native critters on the landscape but wonder what the point of spending money and time on reintroduction is when they’re already present