Sportsmen’s Action Stalls Maine Anti-Bear Hunting Bill

Columbus, OH - Last week, hundreds of Maine sportsmen and women packed a legislative hearing in opposition to a bill that would have banned bear hunting with dogs and bear trapping.

The bill, LD 1474, was supported and backed by the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS).

At the hearing, members of the Joint Committee on Inland Fisheries heard testimony from dozens of Maine sportsmen’s organizations and individual sportsmen and women including the Maine Professional Guides Association, Maine Trappers Association, and the Sportsmen’s Alliance of Maine. After this testimony, the Committee unanimously voted that the bill “ought not to pass,” – a move that will likely kill the bill for this session.

Read the rest of the article by clicking here!

Source:  AmmoLand
For more information on Maine Bear Hunting, click the active link.
Bear Hunting Blog

OR Bill to Allow Bear Hunting with Dogs may get Senate Hearing

The bill passed April 23 out of the House by a vote of 40-19, barely over the required two-thirds majority. It was referred to the Senate committee May 1. [file photo]

The bill passed April 23 out of the House by a vote of 40-19, barely over the required two-thirds majority. It was referred to the Senate committee May 1. [Bear Hunting Blog file photo]

Oregon State Sen. Alan Bates believes a bill that would allow counties to opt out of 18-year-old bans on sport-hunting cougars and bears with hounds and baiting bears likely will get a public hearing in a Senate committee this session amid heavy lobbying both to air it and to quell it.

If so, then House Bill 2624 would become the first such House bill to get a Senate hearing since Measure 18′s passage in 1994 enacted the statewide baiting and hounding bans.

“We haven’t really decided but my sense right now is we’ll probably give it a public hearing,” said Bates, D-Medford, a member of the Senate Environment and Natural Resource Committee, where the bill currently sits.

But whether it makes it to the full Senate for a vote is “up in the air,” Bates said. “It could go either way.

Read the rest of the article by clicking here!

Story by: Mark Freeman
Source: Mail Tribune
Bear Hunting Blog

Montana Grizzly bear plan released

Montana Grizzly Bear management

The goal is to maintain a genetically diverse NCDE grizzly bear population with at least 800 grizzly bears, the plan says. The agency will take public comment for 90 days. [Bear Hunting Blog file photo]

A draft conservation plan to manage grizzly bears in northcentral and western Montana once federal protections are lifted was released by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Friday.

The 150-page document was created by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and other federal agencies, the state of Montana and tribal governments, said Chris Servheen, grizzly bear coordinator for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Servheen emphasized that the conservation plan is not a proposal to remove the grizzly bear from the list of threatened and endangered species at this time. The status of grizzlies remains “threatened.”

However, the conservation strategy, when approved, will serve as the post-delisting management plan for grizzly bears and habitat in the Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem. And once the conservation strategy is approved, the agency plans to move forward with efforts to remove federal protections, possibly as soon as next year, Servheen said.

Read the rest of the story by clicking here!

Story by: Karl Puckett
Source: Great Falls Tribune
For information on Bear Hunting in Montana, click the active link.
Bear Hunting Blog

Mexican Trophy Hunters fined $80,000 in illegal Polar Bear Export attempt

Polar Bear

“Four Mexican hunters returning from Nunavut paid $80,000 in fines April 5 before they made a hasty retreat from Winnipeg back to Mexico — heading home without their polar bear and narwhal trophies. [File photo]

Four Mexican hunters returning from Nunavut paid $80,000 in fines April 5 before they made a hasty retreat from Winnipeg back to Mexico — heading home without their polar bear and narwhal trophies.

The men paid individual fines ranging from $10,000 to $30,000 to the federal government for offenses under the Wild Animal and Plant Protection and Regulation of International and Interprovincial Trade Act and the Fisheries Act.

They were fined after Environment Canada wildlife officers received a tip last week that hunters were planning to take three polar bear hides and three narwhal tusks back to Mexico in a private jet, but without having first obtained the necessary export permits.

Hector Martinez, a property developer in the northern Mexican hub of Monterrey  his two sons, Hector Armando Martinez and Alejandro Martinez, who work for their father, and Martinez’s godson, Gerardo Jimeno Rodriguez, a businessman, had arrived March 15 in Canada with a group of other Mexican hunters.

The group then split up, with some heading for Resolute Bay and the others to Cambridge Bay.

Rodriguez, Martinez and one of his sons went to Resolute Bay to hunt polar bears. His other son and two other Mexican men headed to Cambridge Bay to hunt muskox.

During an April 5 court appearance in Winnipeg, the men said they were sorry for not obtaining the necessary export permits, Erin Magas, a prosecutor with the Public Prosecution Service of Canada, told Nunatsiaq News April 8.

But that didn’t change the outcome.

The hunters’ Nunavut sports hunting permits were in order, but they lacked the proper export permits they would have needed to leave Canada legally with their trophies.

They would have needed an export permit under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, which takes four to six weeks for Environment Canada to process, Magas said.

Even if they had received an export permit, Mexico does not allow the import of marine mammals, she said.

The three men did have an export license to take the polar bear skulls and hides out of Nunavut to an Edmonton taxidermist.

But, according to testimony from their April 5 court hearing in Winnipeg, the men felt the taxidermist wanted too much money to process the trophies.

That’s why they decided to take the hides to Mexico via Winnipeg where Hector Armando Martinez was waiting for them after he had finished hunting musk ox.

Officers from Environment Canada and the Canadian Border Services confiscated the polar bear hides and narwhal tusks found during a search of the hunters’ private jet at the Winnipeg International Airport.

The $80,000 paid by the hunters will go to a federal program, the Environmental Defense Fund, which distributes money to environmental groups.

For the next five years, the hunters must also provide information on any hunting trip to Canada and provide dates, their mode of transportation, where they are going, the name of the licensed outfitter, duration of the hunt, port of export, number of animals being exported and “any and all applicable exportation documents for those animals.”

The hunters must provide that information to the Environment Canada Wildlife Enforcement Directorate in Winnipeg at least one week before the scheduled hunting trip, the judgment said.

The seizure is the first such seizure in five years, Environment Canada said.

Source: Nunatsiaq Online

Bear Hunting Blog

Wyoming Grizzly delisting next year?

Grizzly bears could be delisted in the next year or so, but it must be proven the bruins can get by without whitebark pine nuts.

That’s what Mark Bruscino said at the Wyoming Outfitters Guide Association and Cody Country Outfitters and Guides Association meeting Saturday morning in Cody.

Bruscino is the Wyoming Game and Fish Department statewide supervisor of the large carnivore management section.

He was part of a panel comprised of state and federal officials and one outfitter.

“I’m optimistic — knock on wood — that we’re going to move this thing forward in the next 12 to 14 months,” Bruscino said.

Whitebark pine has declined by 90 percent in some areas of the northern Rockies.

Read the rest of the article by clicking here!

Written by Gib Mathers
Source: Powell Tribune
The Bear Hunting Blog

Oregon Bear hunting: Let the locals choose

The latest proposal strikes us as a reasonable compromise between the current situation and an outright reversal of those restrictions.

It’s House Bill 2624. The House Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee had a public hearing on the bill Tuesday.

We like the legislation because it would give voters a chance to decide whether the limits on cougar and bear hunting should continue.

But here’s the best part of the bill, which was introduced by Rep. Brian Clem, a Democrat from Salem: It would let voters in each of the state’s 36 counties decide how to manage cougar and bear hunting in their counties.

Measure 18, by contrast, was a statewide vote.

Read the rest of the article by clicking here!

Source:  Baker City Herald
Bear Hunting Blog