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More rural working-age people are dying young compared to their urban counterparts, the internet was a lifesaver for rural students during the pandemic but the connection has been broken for many, and conservationists believe a new rule governing public lands will protect them for future generations.

Poll: West Coast Residents Can Coexist with Gray Wolves

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Tuesday, September 24, 2013   

PORTLAND, Ore. - At least two-thirds of people surveyed in Oregon, Washington and California are rooting for the wolves in the controversy over whether to take them off the endangered species list.

That's the result of a new poll of 1100 voters, who said they believe wolves are "a vital part of America's wilderness and natural heritage" and should be protected.

Since 2011, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has floated the idea of delisting wolves in the West. For the most part, it looks like the public won't buy it, says Rob Klavins, wildlife advocate with Oregon Wild.

"There certainly are some people who have legitimate concerns," says Klavins. "But the idea that people want to go back to the days of reducing wolves to the bare minimum populations, or eradicating them or shooting them, it certainly doesn't represent the values that we have - and I think that's what this poll shows."

Of the three states in the survey, Oregon's numbers were lowest in support of restoring wolves to suitable habitat, at 66 percent in agreement. The corresponding figures were 69 percent in California and 71 percent in Washington.

Klavins said it's ironic that next week, two of the hearings on the delisting proposal are in spots where there are no wolves: in Washington, D.C., and Sacramento.

Pam Flick is the California representative for Defenders of Wildlife, the group that commissioned the poll. She points out that there are only about 100 wolves in the Pacific Northwest. And California has only seen one in decades, the famous lone wolf known as "Journey" or "OR-7," who crossed the Oregon border into California a couple of years ago. Flick said that 15-month period the wolf spent in California was enough to reignite public interest there.

"His presence in California stirred the imagination of wolf advocates," Flick recalls. "The possibility of wild wolves roaming in northern California suddenly became very real."

"Journey" is now the only known wolf in western Oregon, where he has been since March. The closest hearing to Oregon on the wolf delisting proposal is the one in Sacramento, on October 2. Written comments will be accepted until October 28.

UPDATE 10/1/13: The Sacramento hearing has been postponed, due to Congressional gridlock and the resulting failure to fund many federal agencies. An additional hearing, scheduled for Oct. 4 in Albuquerque, New Mexico, has also been postponed. USFWS says the hearings will be rescheduled "when the current funding lapse is resolved and we return to work."

See the poll at defenders.org. USFWS wolf information is at FWS.gov.




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