A8 State Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, April 13, 2016 Death of OR-4 a sobering turn for Oregon’s wolf plan Shooting renews debate over managing predators By Eric Mortenson EO Media Group They called him OR-4, and by some accounts he was Oregon’s biggest and baddest wolf, 97 pounds of cunning in his prime and the longtime alpha male of Wallowa Coun- ty’s inluential Imnaha Pack. But OR-4 was nearly 10, old for a wolf in the wild. And his mate limped with a bad back leg. Accompanied by two yearlings, they apparently separated from the rest of the Imnaha Pack or were forced out. In March, they attacked and devoured or injured calves and sheep ive times in private pastures. So on March 31, Oregon Department of Fish and Wild- life staff boarded a helicopter, rose up and shot all four. The decisive action by ODFW may have marked a somber turning point in the state’s work to restore wolves to the landscape. It comes on the heels of the ODFW Com- mission’s decision in Novem- ber 2015 to take gray wolves off the state endangered spe- cies list, and just as the com- mission is beginning a review of the Oregon Wolf Plan, the Courtesy of ODFW Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife biologists place a new working GPS collar on OR-4, the Imnaha wolf pack’s alpha male, after darting him from a helicopter on March 28, 2012. document that governs wolf conservation and manage- ment. Oregon Wild, the Port- land-based conservation group with long involvement in the state’s wolf issue, said shooting wolves should be an “absolute last resort.” “While the wolf plan is out of date and under review, we shouldn’t be taking the most drastic action we can take in wolf management,” Execu- tive Director Sean Stevens said in an email. The commission should not have taken wolves off the state endangered species list in the irst place, but it isn’t likely to revisit that decision, Stevens said. The commission should call upon the department to Your Rural Fa mily Health Clinic Grant County HEALTH not shoot more wolves until the plan review is inished, he said. “But, more importantly, they should recognize that de-listing does not mean that we should suddenly swing open the doors to more ag- gressive management,” Ste- vens said. The ongoing wolf plan review, which may take nine months, should include sci- ence that wasn’t considered in the delisting decision, and the public’s will, he said. It also should create more clarity on non-lethal measures to deter wolves, he said. Publicly, at least, no one is celebrating the shootings. The Oregon Cattlemen’s Association, long on the op- posite side of the argument from Oregon Wild, said ODFW’s action was autho- rized by Phase II of the state’s wolf plan. “The problem needed ad- Department 528 E. Main, St. E, John Day Monday - Friday 8am - 5pm Services Provided: • Pregnancy Testing & Referrals • HIV Testing & Referrals • Cacoon • WIC • High Risk Infants • Maternity Case Management Grant County Health Department does not discriminate against any person on the basis of race, color, national origin, disability, or age in admission, treatment, or participation in its programs, services and activitie s, or in employment. Appointments available Call and schedule your appointment today! TOLL FREE 888-443-9104 or 541-575-0429 By Paris Achen Capital Bureau PORTLAND — Gov. Kate Brown used her state-of-the- state address Friday to claim a series of social, economic and environmental achievements during her irst full year in of- ice. Calling it “a watershed year NO ONE KNOWS YOUR EQUIPMENT BETTER. Your AGCO Parts Dealer has the parts you need when you need them. Hardware, chain, batteries, tillage, belts, cutting parts. We have the quality parts you need to keep your AGCO equipment running smoothly during the demanding harvest season. Highly trained service personnel at AGCO Parts make it all come together, so you can rest easy. Visit your AGCO Parts Dealer and get the parts and services you need to “Keep you in the Field” this season. Find out more at agcoparts.com. for Oregon,” she recounted to a crowd of about 500 at the City Club of Portland that the state had passed several irst-in-the- nation laws. Those policies ban the sale of coal-powered electricity, automatically reg- ister people to vote, set a tiered minimum wage and allow the sale of birth control without a prescription. She compared the new pol- icies to the legacy of former Gov. Tom McCall, known for his leadership in passing land- mark land-use planning laws in 1973. “I think that these irst-ever achievements over the past 14 months would have made Gov. McCall very proud,” Brown said. She also committed to pro- posing a transportation plan during the 2017 legislative session. That echoed a promise she made in her irst state-of- the-state address in April 2015 to make transportation one of her top priorities, but she later delayed that plan. She called her ascension from secretary of state to the state’s highest ofice in Feb- ruary 2015 “unexpected.” As secretary of state, she auto- matically succeeded Gov. John Kitzhaber when he resigned Help is available for victims of sexual assault in Grant County. If you or someone you know has been a victim of sexual assault, please call: Heart of Grant County 541-620-1342 Grant County Victim Assistance Program 541-575-4026 Remember: sex without consent = sexual assault This project was supported by Grant No. 2015-WR-AX-0008 awarded by the Office on Violence Against Wo m en, U.S. Department of Justice. The opinions, findings, conclusions, and recommendations expressed in this publication/pro gram/exhibition are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Department of Justice, Office on Violence Against Women. Designed by the Blue Mountain Eagle parts that are not working.” Politics and policy aside, the shooting of OR-4 gave people pause. He was a big- ger-than-life character; he’d evaded a previous ODFW kill order and had to be re-collared a couple times as he somehow shook off the state’s effort to track him. OR-4’s Imnaha Pack was the state’s second oldest, des- ignated in 2009, and it pro- duced generations of success- ful dispersers. OR-4’s many progeny included Oregon’s best-known wanderer, OR-7, who left the Imnaha Pack in 2011 and zig-zagged his way southwest into California be- fore settling in the Southern Oregon Cascades. OR-25, which killed a calf in Klamath County and now is in Northern California, dis- persed from the Imnaha Pack. The alpha female of the Shasta Pack, California’s irst, is from the Imnaha Pack as well. Rob Klavins, who lives in Wallowa County and is Ore- gon Wild’s ield representative in the area, ran across OR-4’s tracks a couple times and saw him once. Despite his fearsome repu- tation, the wolf tucked his tail between his legs, ran behind a nearby tree and barked at Klavins and his hiking group until they left. “Killing animals four or ive times your size is a tough way to make a living,” Klavins said. “Some people appreciate OR-4 as a symbol of the te- nacity of wolves, even a lot of folks who dislike wolves have sort of a begrudging respect for him.” Brown delivers second state-of-the-state address Karen Triplett, FNP • Primary Care • Acute Care • Women’s Health Exams • Men and Children Exams • Immunizations • Family Planning • Contraception Amaroq Rob Weiss Klavins dressed and ODFW handled it correctly,” spokeswoman Kay- li Hanley said in an email. “We acknowledge that while this decision was necessary for the sake of species coexistence, it was a dificult decision.” Michael Finley, chair of the ODFW Commission, said the department handled the situa- tion properly. “I feel that the department acted in total good faith,” Fin- ley said. “They followed the letter and the spirit of the wolf plan.” Another conservation group, Defenders of Wildlife, called the shootings “a very sad day for us” but also said it appeared ODFW followed the wolf plan. “The inal plan is a compro- mise, but it is among the best of all the state plans in that it em- phasizes the value of wolves on the landscape, and requires landowners to try non-lethal methods of deterring wolves before killing them is ever considered,” the group said in a prepared statement. Amaroq Weiss, West Coast wolf organizer for the Center for Biological Diver- sity, said the Imnaha Pack shootings may lead to more poaching, because killing wolves decreases tolerance of them and leads to a belief that “you have to kill wolves in order to preserve them.” Weiss agreed that coming across a calf or sheep that’s been torn apart and consumed — the skull and hide was all that was left of one calf after the OR-4 group fed on it — must be gut-wrenching for producers. But she said those animals are raised to be killed and eaten. “They don’t die any more a humane death in a slaughterhouse than being killed by a wild animal,” she said. “It’s a hard discussion to ind a common place of agree- ment.” She said such losses are the reason Oregon established the compensation program: to pay for livestock losses and to help with the cost of defensive mea- sures that scare wolves away. Weiss said Oregon rushed to move to Phase II of its wolf conservation and management plan in the eastern part of the state, which was prompted by reaching a population goal of four breeding pairs for three consecutive years. That also prompted the ODFW Com- mission to take wolves off the state endangered species list in 2015, although they remain on the federal endangered list in the western two-thirds of the state. Like others, Weiss believes the state should have held off on such changes until it in- ished the mandated review of the wolf plan. “Under Phase I, Oregon was the state we could all point to” for successfully managing wolves, Weiss said. “I would hope they look at what parts of the wolf plan are working, and look at the that same month over an inlu- ence-peddling scandal involv- ing his iancée, Cylvia Hayes. Brown said she has since strived to enhance government transparency. She cited new policies that require lobbyists to disclose whom they represent with- in three days of hiring, and changes to ethics laws that in- crease penalties for knowingly using public ofice for private gain. However, the Pamplin Me- dia/EO Media Group Capital Bureau recently reported that meaningful public records re- form, such as deadlines and fee limits for responding to public record, has failed to progress since Brown took ofice. She also failed to follow through on a plan to create a public records advocate to help the public with public record deni- als, but she repeated her plan to propose legislation to create that position in 2017. Brown described other accomplishments as invest- ing $70 million in addressing the state’s housing shortage, boosting funding for higher education and early childhood education and subsidizing col- lege tuition with the Oregon Opportunity Grant. She offered few speciics on policy proposals for the com- ing year. In addition to offer- ing a transportation package, she repeated her commitment to improve the state’s gradua- tion rate – one of the worst in the nation. She recently creat- ed a new position of education innovation oficer to develop a strategy to accomplish that goal and plans to hire for the position in the next couple of weeks. Republicans respond Senate Republican Lead- er Ted Ferrioli (R-John Day) released the following state- ment following Governor Kate Brown’s second state- of-the-state address held at the Portland City Club: “In February, Gover- nor Brown and Democrat leadership failed to do the one thing Oregonians were counting on: take meaning- ful steps toward restoring transparency and account- ability to state government. Governor Brown promised in her inaugural State of the State to overhaul Oregon’s public records system and strengthen Oregon’s ethics laws. She has failed, just like she failed to deliver a bipartisan transportation package in 2015. She and her Democrat colleagues failed to address critical missteps by state agencies resulting in high costs for taxpayers and the loss of trust in government services like our foster care sys- tem. Instead, the Governor is praising her Democrat colleagues for back room deals that resulted in a slew of new mandates costing small businesses and work- ing families. How long will Oregon voters allow their leaders to say one thing and do another? Oregonians de- serve more than lip service. The reign of one-party rule in Oregon needs to come to an end before the quality of life we all value disappears.” Attend a Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation Dinner and Benefit Auction Where fun and fund-raising combine for a memorable evening. Date: Time: Place: Saturday, April 23 4:00—Doors open 5:30—Dinner 7:30—Auction Pavilion— Grant County Fairgrounds Ticket Information: Gale Wall 541-575-2661 A great time for a great cause. Proceeds benefit elk and other wildlife. 03578