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Hunters React To Wisconsin Governor Evers’ Wolf Management Veto

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 3, 2024

On Friday, March 31st, Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers vetoed 41 bills which had been passed by the state’s legislature. Among the vetoed bills was Senate Bill, SB139, which would have set a target population goal for the gray wolf which would have helped manage the state’s out-of-control and currently unmanaged wolf population. The veto was immediately condemned by Wisconsin hunters, farmers and residents in the areas most impacted by the increasing wolf population, and around the nation by groups who see the move as purely political.

The state’s Department of Natural Resources had recently presented a new wolf management plan which eliminated the previous plan’s inclusion of a target wolf population. As a result of the DNR’s new plan, State Senator Rob Stafsholt introduced SB139 to mandate the DNR set a goal for the state’s wolf population.

Stafsholt said, “If we are not managing to a specific goal number, the DNR has essentially allowed there to be no trigger to reduce the population, despite the many problems caused by having too many wolves on our landscape, such as depletion of our deerpopulation and loss of cattle to farmers.”

Wisconsin Congressman Tom Tiffany weighed in saying, “Governor Evers’ decision to veto sound wolf management legislation should make it clear, rural Wisconsin and hunters are roadkill for Evers’ anti-hunting and anti-wildlife management agenda.”

“Wolves have been used as political pawns for far too long, and this veto is pure
politics,” stated Keith Mark, founder of Hunter Nation a national non-profit organization protecting the hunting lifestyle.

“In his list of reasons for the veto, Evers puts ‘social complexities’ at the top, making it very clear he prioritizes his big city constituents, those least affected, over the people who live and recreate where he wants wolves to roam unchecked,” insisted Chris Vaughan, Wisconsin State Director of Hunter Nation.

“This should focus national attention on the need for gray wolf management,” Mark went on to say. “I am calling on Wisconsin Senators Ron Johnson and Tammy Baldwin to join with Representative Tom Tiffany and pass his legislation to delist the gray wolf immediately, with no judicial review. If we don’t start managing the gray wolf, there won’t be any deer or moose left to hunt and it will be the American Hunter who becomes extinct.” Mark concluded.

Due to unmanaged populations, wolves are a real threat to wildlife, hunting and more...

In 1974, there were nearly 16 million American hunters.  Deer, elk, moose and all game populations were on the rise.  Hunting was an honored and revered skill, really a lifestyle, that had been passed down from generation to generation.  At that time, the American hunter was living in “the good old days of hunting,” and the future of hunting had never looked so bright.

In 2000 Wisconsin hunters harvested over 615,293 Whitetail Deer, in 2023 the deer harvest was under 300,000.

248 wolves in 2000 have grown to over 1,000 today.

The 2023 firearms season was the lowest on record, statewide deer harvest was down nearly 20% from 2022.

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2023
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