Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: Roundhead on May 11, 2017, 12:00:05 AMSo how is the public supposed to accept the statistics of wolf related incidents?Lets say 20 people actually reported wolf attacks and/or dangerous encounters this year.Where and how is that data available?Are we going to accept the numbers reported by WDFW without facts?What if you're a rancher who had reported a dozen livestock kills but you have no idea about the other ranches around your area?I think this is a feel good withdraw law that benefits the wolves identities than it is to protect people.We need to deal with the issue/problem and find the root cause, not hide from it and hope that the problem goes away.Take threats seriously, investigate them, and bring them to justice.The reports are still there. They just don't have names attached to them. Where's the problem? As far as where the reports are stored, where you can find the info, whether or not they actually get reported....that's got nothing to do with this law. Apples and oranges.
So how is the public supposed to accept the statistics of wolf related incidents?Lets say 20 people actually reported wolf attacks and/or dangerous encounters this year.Where and how is that data available?Are we going to accept the numbers reported by WDFW without facts?What if you're a rancher who had reported a dozen livestock kills but you have no idea about the other ranches around your area?I think this is a feel good withdraw law that benefits the wolves identities than it is to protect people.We need to deal with the issue/problem and find the root cause, not hide from it and hope that the problem goes away.Take threats seriously, investigate them, and bring them to justice.
Quote from: jackelope on May 11, 2017, 08:48:14 AMQuote from: Roundhead on May 11, 2017, 12:00:05 AMSo how is the public supposed to accept the statistics of wolf related incidents?Lets say 20 people actually reported wolf attacks and/or dangerous encounters this year.Where and how is that data available?Are we going to accept the numbers reported by WDFW without facts?What if you're a rancher who had reported a dozen livestock kills but you have no idea about the other ranches around your area?I think this is a feel good withdraw law that benefits the wolves identities than it is to protect people.We need to deal with the issue/problem and find the root cause, not hide from it and hope that the problem goes away.Take threats seriously, investigate them, and bring them to justice.The reports are still there. They just don't have names attached to them. Where's the problem? As far as where the reports are stored, where you can find the info, whether or not they actually get reported....that's got nothing to do with this law. Apples and oranges.So you have total trust and taking the reports from WDFW as valid information?What ever WDFW say, goes, is that it?
Quote from: Roundhead on May 11, 2017, 06:38:06 PMQuote from: jackelope on May 11, 2017, 08:48:14 AMQuote from: Roundhead on May 11, 2017, 12:00:05 AMSo how is the public supposed to accept the statistics of wolf related incidents?Lets say 20 people actually reported wolf attacks and/or dangerous encounters this year.Where and how is that data available?Are we going to accept the numbers reported by WDFW without facts?What if you're a rancher who had reported a dozen livestock kills but you have no idea about the other ranches around your area?I think this is a feel good withdraw law that benefits the wolves identities than it is to protect people.We need to deal with the issue/problem and find the root cause, not hide from it and hope that the problem goes away.Take threats seriously, investigate them, and bring them to justice.The reports are still there. They just don't have names attached to them. Where's the problem? As far as where the reports are stored, where you can find the info, whether or not they actually get reported....that's got nothing to do with this law. Apples and oranges.So you have total trust and taking the reports from WDFW as valid information?What ever WDFW say, goes, is that it?You're way off base and twisting what jackelope said. This legislation was created by our local legislators here in the NE to try and protect the ranchers who have losses and then have lunatics threatening them. It's too bad you can't see past your hatred of WDFW to recognize the benefit of protecting the identity of these ranchers who have already suffered due to wolf impacts.
Quote from: bearpaw on May 12, 2017, 09:14:35 AMQuote from: Roundhead on May 11, 2017, 06:38:06 PMQuote from: jackelope on May 11, 2017, 08:48:14 AMQuote from: Roundhead on May 11, 2017, 12:00:05 AMSo how is the public supposed to accept the statistics of wolf related incidents?Lets say 20 people actually reported wolf attacks and/or dangerous encounters this year.Where and how is that data available?Are we going to accept the numbers reported by WDFW without facts?What if you're a rancher who had reported a dozen livestock kills but you have no idea about the other ranches around your area?I think this is a feel good withdraw law that benefits the wolves identities than it is to protect people.We need to deal with the issue/problem and find the root cause, not hide from it and hope that the problem goes away.Take threats seriously, investigate them, and bring them to justice.The reports are still there. They just don't have names attached to them. Where's the problem? As far as where the reports are stored, where you can find the info, whether or not they actually get reported....that's got nothing to do with this law. Apples and oranges.So you have total trust and taking the reports from WDFW as valid information?What ever WDFW say, goes, is that it?You're way off base and twisting what jackelope said. This legislation was created by our local legislators here in the NE to try and protect the ranchers who have losses and then have lunatics threatening them. It's too bad you can't see past your hatred of WDFW to recognize the benefit of protecting the identity of these ranchers who have already suffered due to wolf impacts. I understand all that as a given and basis for this law.Now I'm just asking a simple question, are we going to trust WDFW to deliver the accurate quality and quantity of reports?It's not hatred for me, it is the trust that I never had with WDFW.
WDFW operates the best in the shade; the less transparent the better. Just look at our fisheries. They deal with the tribes behind doors in private and we have nothing to say. Hell, we can't even be in the same room listening and their conversations aren't even recorded and broadcasted. So this wolf issue is a win-win for WDFW to slowly shut the door of transparencies. Oh well you get what you ask for.