Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: 6x6in6 on April 02, 2013, 03:51:03 PMQuote from: JLS on April 02, 2013, 03:35:14 PMWDFW can initiate a status review prior to achieving the3-year requirement for the recovery objectives. Review under the State Environmental Policy Act(SEPA) and public review are also required as part of the delisting process. Delisting is based onlyon the biological status of the species in Washington. Information from the status review is thenpresented to the Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission to make the final determination ondelisting. The Commission would not consider final action until after achieving the recoveryobjectives.If a year occurred where there were 18 successful breeding pairs of wolves and the distributioncriteria for delisting were met, then WDFW could begin the process to write a status review toprepare a delisting recommendation at that timeThis is right out of the wolf plan.My personal belief is that wolves will be delisted in three years. I certainly could be wrong.Did you miss the "can" and "could" JLS?Did you see that the Commission gets to make a final determination?Do you think the Commission will actually vary from their own recommended wolf plan and approve a status review that the WDFW "can" initiate?So what is your interpretation of delisting? What does it mean to you, as it relates to the language of the wolf plan? To me, it's just a step in the right direction with 2 more bigger steps to go, pending lawsuits and a public vote.No, I didn't see any of that Can and could are very different from shall and should. No, the Commission will not vary from the plan and I never said they would. It says very clearly that the Commish would not consider final action until after recovery objectives. Delisting to me is removing wolves from a status that guarantees them protection, i.e they are not still considered sensitive or threatened. There are mountains of data that can support the biological basis for allowing wolf hunting. I do not see that being the hurdle. We can argue until we're blue in the face. Neither of us can "prove" our arguments, so it's pointless for me to continue.In the interim, we can choose to do two things. We can continue to wring our hands and spew forth the propoganda of Toby Bridges and Lobowatch, or we can speak to the scientific facts that clearly show that wolves can withstand a very high degree of hunting pressure without any significant danger to their population.
Quote from: JLS on April 02, 2013, 03:35:14 PMWDFW can initiate a status review prior to achieving the3-year requirement for the recovery objectives. Review under the State Environmental Policy Act(SEPA) and public review are also required as part of the delisting process. Delisting is based onlyon the biological status of the species in Washington. Information from the status review is thenpresented to the Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission to make the final determination ondelisting. The Commission would not consider final action until after achieving the recoveryobjectives.If a year occurred where there were 18 successful breeding pairs of wolves and the distributioncriteria for delisting were met, then WDFW could begin the process to write a status review toprepare a delisting recommendation at that timeThis is right out of the wolf plan.My personal belief is that wolves will be delisted in three years. I certainly could be wrong.Did you miss the "can" and "could" JLS?Did you see that the Commission gets to make a final determination?Do you think the Commission will actually vary from their own recommended wolf plan and approve a status review that the WDFW "can" initiate?So what is your interpretation of delisting? What does it mean to you, as it relates to the language of the wolf plan? To me, it's just a step in the right direction with 2 more bigger steps to go, pending lawsuits and a public vote.
WDFW can initiate a status review prior to achieving the3-year requirement for the recovery objectives. Review under the State Environmental Policy Act(SEPA) and public review are also required as part of the delisting process. Delisting is based onlyon the biological status of the species in Washington. Information from the status review is thenpresented to the Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission to make the final determination ondelisting. The Commission would not consider final action until after achieving the recoveryobjectives.If a year occurred where there were 18 successful breeding pairs of wolves and the distributioncriteria for delisting were met, then WDFW could begin the process to write a status review toprepare a delisting recommendation at that timeThis is right out of the wolf plan.My personal belief is that wolves will be delisted in three years. I certainly could be wrong.
Quote from: 6x6in6 on April 02, 2013, 04:18:13 PMI certainly hope that you are not thinking that I am some how aligned with the views of Toby and Lobo are you? If I did, I wouldn't even be trying to discuss this with you. It was a rather general shot across the bow to those that do espouse his rhetoric.
I certainly hope that you are not thinking that I am some how aligned with the views of Toby and Lobo are you?