The Fish and Wildlife Service has the power to stop the immoral killing of wolves right now, and its refusal to act violates the law and the best science.
Representative photo via Trapping Time TV
The Biden Administration is moving to leave vulnerable wolves
stripped of federal protections, despite campaign promises to
protect them.
Court documents show the federal government asked a judge to toss a
lawsuit recommending that President Joe Biden re-list gray wolves as
vulnerable species under the Endangered Species Act (ESA).
The lawsuit — filed by attorneys with Defenders of Wildlife, the
Natural Resources Defense Council, and EarthJustice on behalf of
several animal welfare and conservation groups against the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service (USFWS), the Department of Interior (DOI) and
DOI Secretary Deb Haaland, respectively — alleged that wolves have
not actually recovered.
Attorney Kristen Boyles, in speaking about the filing of
Earthjustice’s lawsuit in January, said the rollback was “what
happens when bad science drives bad policy.”
Wolves have been without an endangered species listing — or the
corresponding protections — since the Trump Administration stripped
all wolves in the lower 48 U.S. states in November 2020. Independent
peer reviews found that decision was not backed by science.
Biden — during his presidential campaign and after taking office —
said he would request a review of the ESA rollbacks.
That review took the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service a matter of
days, after which the department announced the decision was “valid.”
The federal government is sticking to that statement, saying in
court documents that USFWS “rationally concluded that gray wolves
are recovered” and that staff had adequately analyzed the threats to
wolves in “significant” portions of their range, according to CBS
News.
The government court’s filing points to slightly more than 6,000
gray wolves remaining in the United States — mostly concentrated in
Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Oregon,
Washington, and northern California.
Boyles, the Earthjustice attorney, called the move a betrayal.
“The Biden administration has betrayed its duty to protect and
recover wolves,” she said. “The Fish and Wildlife Service has the
power to stop the immoral killing of wolves right now, and its
refusal to act violates the law and the best science, as well as its
treaty obligations to tribal nations.”
The government’s move contradicts campaign promises from Biden to
protect wolves, with the President reportedly saying he was “all in”
about hearing what he could do to help wolves after his
grandchildren reportedly told him, “they’re going to kill all the
wolves!,” according to Earthjustice.
Earthjustice says the most important — and effective — step that
Biden could have taken was restoring ESA protections.
In addition to animal welfare advocates, more than 1.8 million
Americans, 400 veterinary professionals, hundreds of scientists and
businesses, and 86 members of Congress spoke out against the
November 2020 de-listing.
While we are disappointed in the federal government’s dual decisions
to strip wolves of protections, we thank the more than 32,400 people
who signed our petition asking for their re-listing under the
Endangered Species Act.
We will continue to fight for humane treatment of wolves and all
other animals.