FROM PAGE ONE Saturday, april 2, 2022 tHE OBSErVEr — A7 WOLVES Continued from Page A1 protections of wolves do not under- stand that the livelihood of inde- pendent ranchers like him is at stake — especially now that one of the few tools ranchers had to take out wolves that habitually prey on livestock has been taken away. Vardanega said it is easy for city dwellers to romanticize wolves because they do not have to live with them. “That’s not how it works in America,” Anderson said. “That’s not how it is supposed to work.” Even before last month’s court decision returned some wolf pop- ulations to federal control, many Oregon ranchers were already suspicious of the state’s wolf plan, part of a policy structure that they believe is rigged against them by a hyper-liberal majority in Salem. Vardanega said he does not trust ODFW and believes the agency has made wolf depreda- tion too hard to prove. The reason, he said, is because the agency has to toe a left-leaning political line. Thus, the process of establishing wolf depredation is fundamentally skewed to favor an environmentalist agenda. Not only that, he said ranchers suffer in ways that the current system doesn’t even touch. In addi- tion to above-average losses in cir- cumstances where they can’t prove wolf kills, non-lethal measures mean a lot of additional work for ranchers that involves extra vigi- lance and the cost of paying a range rider upward of $1,500 a month. Along with paying the range rider, Vardanega said he is often anxiously awake at 2 a.m., casting spotlights into the dark to defend his herds. Why were wolves relisted? Environmental groups sued the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Ser- vice and former Interior Secre- tary David Bernhardt in 2021, after the Trump administration removed wolves from the endan- gered species in the waning days of his term. The conservation groups argued the delisting was premature. In last month’s ruling, Judge Jeffrey S. White of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California said U.S. Fish and Wildlife did Steven Mitchell/Blue Mountain Eagle Izee rancher M.T. Anderson moves his cattle in February 2022. A state investigator could not determine whether a pair of wolves seen feeding on the carcass of one of Anderson’s cows in February caused the animal’s death. not take into account wolves out- side the Great Lakes and Northern Rocky Mountain regions when the agency proclaimed wolf con- servation a success and removed the apex predators’ federal protections. Ironically, removing wolves from the endangered species list is one goal that conservative and liberal administrations have long had in common. Even though the decision to delist wolves came down during the Trump administration, attor- neys for the Biden administration defended the rule that removed protections, arguing wolves were resilient enough to bounce back even if their numbers dropped sharply due to intensive hunting. Not only that, but other Dem- ocratic and Republican adminis- trations have tried to delist wolves over the years, failing every time. The last attempt to take wolves off the endangered list came during the Obama years. According to John Williams, who chairs the wolf committee of the Oregon Cattlemen’s Asso- ciation, the U.S. Fish and Wild- life Service has 60 days to decide whether to appeal the U.S. Dis- trict Court ruling. So far, Wil- liams said, the cattlemen’s associ- ation has not heard if the agency intends to contest the decision. Williams said the judge denied the livestock industry’s request for intervenor status, which would have given groups like his the ability to appeal. Meanwhile, the Center for Bio- logical Diversity, one of the envi- ronmental groups behind the law- suit that overturned the Trump administration’s delisting deci- sion, is trying to extend federal wolf protections still further. A question of trust Ranchers who lose livestock to wolf depredation are supposed to be compensated for the value of the animals, but getting paid is not as simple as filing a claim. First, the cattlemen’s associa- tion’s Williams said, the livestock producer has to find the carcass — and they need to find it quickly, before decomposition makes it impossible to identify as a wolf kill. Then, he said, an investiga- tion has to prove beyond a reason- able doubt that it was wolves that killed the animal. If a wolf kill is confirmed, Williams said, the rancher can submit a request for compensation through their county’s compensa- tion committee. That’s assuming the rancher’s county has a com- mittee — not all counties do. Finally, he said, there has to be money available in the county’s compensation fund. Those funds can be depleted by prior claims, and counties must apply to the state for more money on an annual basis. The cattlemen’s association supported House Bill 4127, a mea- sure in the 2022 Legislature to provide an additional $1 million for the state’s wolf compensation fund to reimburse ranchers for dead and missing livestock and the cost of non-lethal methods for preventing wolf attacks. After a public hearing last month, the bill died in committee without ever getting the chance for a floor vote. Danielle Moser, coordinator of Oregon Wild’s wildlife program, said she wanted to see more trans- parency in the compensation pro- gram. Other critics argued that the wolf compensation fund is prone to misuse, and putting more money into it would encourage ranchers not to look for missing animals but instead simply default to blaming wolves. Rep. Mark Owens, R-Crane, was one of the bill’s chief spon- sors. He contends environmental groups targeted the bill not on its merits but simply because killing it would make their supporters feel good about protecting wolves. “Bumper-sticker politics won the day without substance,” Owens said. Who makes the call? There were 49 confirmed wolf depredations across the state last year, according to Ryan Torland, a district biologist with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. ODFW will continue to be the agency conducting depredation investigations, Torland said, even in parts of Oregon where wolves are now under federal jurisdiction. However, he added, only the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will be able to authorize lethal take of wolves in those areas. “As far as I know they have not approved the take of any wolves while the wolves have been on the endangered species list,” he said. “They possess that authority while listed, and ODFW does not.” Torland said an ODFW inves- tigation of a possible wolf dep- redation is similar to a detec- tive’s evaluation of a crime scene. He told the Eagle that biologists gather information and send it to the agency’s wolf experts in La Grande, who make the call whether a wolf was responsible for the death of an animal. He said ODFW investigators operate much like sheriff’s depu- ties, who would submit evidence from a crime scene to the district attorney to decide whether there is enough to prove someone com- mitted a crime. Grant County Sheriff Todd McKinley agreed with that assessment. “It is not much different than a fairly major crime scene,” McKinley said. “You’ve got something that’s been killed or attacked, and you’ve got to find the facts. And if you’re going to do it, you better put the effort into it and do it right.” McKinley had something like that in mind when he invited Baker County Sheriff Travis Ash to speak to the Grant County Stockgrowers Association about how Baker County handles wolf depredations during the group’s March meeting at the Grant County Fairgrounds. Ash said he has heard the complaints, concerns and argu- ments from livestock producers regarding wolf depredations and how ODFW investigates them. However, he said, Baker County is about five or six years down the road from where Grant County is when it comes to wolf depredations. “Build those relationships with those guys that have to do the work,” he said. “And understand, though, that if the evidence isn’t there, they have to say that the evidence is not there.” McKinley’s staff is gearing up to do depredation investigations in Grant County. McKinley told the stockgrowers that Undersheriff Zach Mobley and Sgt. Danny Komning have been through ODFW’s wolf training and that he could get other deputies trained as well. An emotional issue For Vardanega, wolves are a personal issue. Many of those who support putting wolves back on the endangered species list do not realize how hard ranchers work and how protecting their cattle against predators brings a high cost in both money and time. “This is real life,” he said. “This is how we make a living.” Oregon Wild’s Danielle Moser takes wolves personally, too. To Moser, wolves are an iconic spe- cies that deserve protection. “I think (wolves) are the essen- tial American animal in many ways,” she said. For Williams, the wolf com- mittee chair for the cattlemen’s association, the wolf debate boils down to two competing sets of values: one that prioritizes ani- mals, and one that prioritizes people. “(Environmentalists) have different priorities,” Williams said. “They’re more interested in hearing a wolf howl than they are (a rancher) being able to have their way of life.” WHERE WILL MOMENTUM TAKE YOU? HOME EQUITY LINE OF CREDIT Don’t keep those home renovations or that dream vacation waiting! hzcu.org/momentum *OAC. Introductory rate valid for 6 months from the date the loan is booked. After the first 6 months a variable rate will apply, based on the Wall Street Journal prime rate plus a margin and adjusted quarterly; current rates range from 3.75% - 18.00% APR as of 2/10/22, based on credit worthiness. Maximum APR = 18%. 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