BREAKING: Idaho Governor Little signs wolf extermination bill into law

For Release: May 7, 2021

Idaho Governor Little signs wolf extermination bill into law

New law allows hunters, trappers, and private contractors to slaughter 90% of the wolves in Idaho by numerous brutal methods

BOISE, ID—Idaho Governor Brad Little has signed a gray wolf extermination bill into law allowing hunters, trappers, and even paid private contractors to slaughter 90% of the gray wolves in Idaho, up to 1,350 wolves in total.

According to Western Watersheds Project, the new law authorizes year-round wolf trapping on private lands, including during the season when pups and nursing pups and females are most vulnerable. The law allows killing wolves by all means used to kill coyotes, including night hunting with night-vision equipment, aerial gunning, as well as hunting from snowmobiles, all-terrain vehicles and other brutal methods. It also allows an individual to purchase unlimited wolf tags and to use those tags for hunting, trapping, and snaring in any unit where the season is open.

This new wolf extermination law in Idaho is only possible because ten years ago this week federal Endangered Species Act protections were stripped from gray wolves in Idaho, Montana, eastern Washington, eastern Oregon, and northern Utah via a rider attached to a must-pass budget bill by U.S. Senator Jon Tester (D-MT) and U.S. Rep. Mike Simpson (R-ID).

This undemocratic move a decade ago—which blocked any judicial review of the rider—opened the floodgates for widespread wolf killing in the northern Rockies, including by hunters, trappers, and state and federal agencies. Over the past few years, state “management” of wolves in the northern Rockies has included Idaho Fish and Game (IDFG) hiring a professional hunter-trapper to go into the Frank Church-River of No Return Wilderness to slaughter wolves and IDFG conducting aerial gunning operations to kill wolves in some of the most remote roadless federal wildlands remaining in the lower-48 states.

More recently—during a 12-month period from July 1, 2019 and June 30, 2020—hunters, trappers, and state and federal agencies killed 570 wolves in Idaho, including at least 35 wolf pups. The state of Idaho also allows a $1,000 “bounty” paid to trappers per dead wolf, including wolves slaughtered on America’s federal public lands and deep within designated Wilderness areas.

The dire situation for wolves in Montana following the 2011 delisting rider is much the same. Fresh off revelations that Governor Greg Gianforte violated state hunting regulations in February when he trapped and shot a collared Yellowstone wolf, Gov Gianforte has since signed numerous draconian bills to slaughter more wolves. New barbaric laws in Montana allow hunters and trappers to kill an unlimited number of wolves with a single license, allow a wolf “bounty,’ allows trappers to use cruel strangulation neck snares, extend the wolf-trapping season, and authorize night-time hunting of wolves on private lands and baiting of wolves.

“The barbaric situation facing wolves in Montana and Idaho prove that the gray wolf still needs federal Endangered Species Act protections. As we clearly warned ten years ago, the state ‘management’ of wolves essentially amounts to the brutal state-sanctioned eradication of this keystone native species,” said Sarah McMillian, the Montana-based conservation director for WildEarth Guardians.

“WildEarth Guardians and our allies filed a lawsuit ten years ago in an attempt and overturn this undemocratic, spiteful wolf rider because we believed the wolf delisting rider violated the U.S. Constitution. While our lawsuit wasn’t successful because Congress simply closed the courthouse doors, the hateful and on-going attempts to completely decimate wolf populations in Idaho and Montana warrants national outrage and action by Congress to restore wolf protections in the northern Rockies,” said John Horning, WildEarth Guardians’ executive director.

“State ‘management’ of wolves in Idaho and Montana harkens back to an era when people sought to exterminate wolves altogether, and nearly succeeded. These types of actions were not only deplorable in the early 1900s, but they have zero place in science-based management of a keystone species in 2021, especially in the midst of a biodiversity crisis and nature crisis,” said McMillian. “We must not abandon fragile wolf-recovery efforts and allow anti-wolf states, hunters, and trappers to push these iconic species back to the brink of extinction.”

CONTACTS: 
Sarah McMillan, WildEarth Guardians, (406) 549-3895, [email protected]
John Horning, WildEarth Guardians, (505) 795-5083, [email protected]

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3 comments on “BREAKING: Idaho Governor Little signs wolf extermination bill into law

  1. Governor Little is a cruel man inside and out. I’m sorry for the wolves in Idaho. We have enough cruelty in our world he has to double up on it. Way to be a man.

    1. Get serious :Stop buy/eating Idaho beef and contact the Idaho state government andt tell them you are doing so (Better yet stop eating beef and mutton from anywhere and let the entire industry know) until the law is repealed (you may not want to go back when you see how you feel).

  2. Governor Little is a cruel man with no regard for species survival. He should not be permitted to make such a rule.

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