Groups seek review of Oregon wolf decision
PORTLAND — Saying the state acted prematurely, three environmental groups on Dec. 30 challenged the removal of Oregon Endangered Species Act protection for gray wolves.
The Center for Biological Diversity, Oregon Wild and Cascadia Wildlands have petitioned the Oregon Court of Appeals to review the November decision by the state Fish and Wildlife Commission to remove gray wolves from the state’s endangered species list.
The groups are not seeking a stay or injunctive relief, only to have an impartial review of the decision, said Nick Cady of Cascadia Wildlands.
“What we’re challenging is that rule wasn’t based on science,” he said.
The state Department of Fish and Wildlife will have to provide all records leading up to the decision, Cady said. He could not estimate how long it would be before the review takes place.
The state Department of Fish and Wildlife did not immediately return a phone call.
Oregon currently has about 82 wolves, most of them in the northeastern corner of the state. Ranchers there have faced livestock losses because of wolves attacking cattle, sheep and guard dogs.
“We always knew any decision would be appealable,” said rancher Todd Nash, chairman of the Oregon Cattlemen’s Association Wolf Committee. “Our response will be to seek legislation to back up what the commission voted on and put it in law.”
He said the state wolf management plan already dictates how wolves are managed.
“If (the review) doesn’t change what the wolf management plan is, what will it do?” he asked.
In the eastern one-third of the state, wolves are not protected under either state or federal endangered species laws but are managed under the state’s wolf management plan.
In the western two-thirds of Oregon, wolves are also protected under the federal Endangered Species Act.
The environmental groups allege state wildlife managers violated Oregon’s Endangered Species Act and ignored the best scientific evidence available and the overwhelming number of people who commented against the delisting proposal, said Rob Klavins, northeast Oregon field coordinator for Oregon Wild.
“By their own analysis, wolves are extinct in 90 percent of their range in Oregon,” Klavins said.