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Thursday, February 17, 2022

Gray wolves returned to Threatened and Endangered Species list

Gray Wolf. (Photo © Tracy Brooks. Courtesy Mission Wolf / US Fish and Wildlife Service)

By Jeff Towner and Terri Bocklund*
Information from Upper Peninsula Environmental Coalition (UPEC)
Posted Feb. 15, 2022, on upenvironment.org


The Upper Peninsula Environmental Coalition and its Board of Directors are celebrating the decision last week that has returned Upper Peninsula gray wolves (and gray wolves in most of the lower 48 states) to the federal list of threatened and endangered species. On Feb. 10, 2022, a federal judge in the Northern District of California reversed and vacated a January 2021 removal of the gray wolf from the list of threatened and endangered species under the Endangered Species Act.

For UP wolves, this specifically means that for the time being, efforts by Michigan legislators to bring about a recreational season for wolf hunting and trapping will come to a halt. Sen. Ed McBroom has energetically promoted a wolf harvest through proposed legislation and resolutions. He and those who work with him and support these legislative actions have now effectively had their hands tied. Notably, Rep. Sarah Cambensy "passed" on a recent legislative action (SCR 7) that would authorize and organize an Upper Peninsula wolf hunt. UPEC acknowledges and appreciates her position.
Gray wolves. (Photo © Yannick Menard. Courtesy UPEC)

However, the ruling does not change the delisted status of gray wolves in the Northern Rockies states of Idaho, Wyoming, and Montana, where wolves are persecuted ruthlessly. This population of wolves was removed from Endangered Species Act protections by Congress in 2011 and was not part of the lawsuit. This act of Congress has proven to be ill-considered, especially in light of the wanton killing of wolves in those three states.

The Michigan Wolf Management Advisory Council will continue its work to update the existing Wolf Management Plan of 2015, and aims to make its recommendations to the Michigan Natural Resources Commission sometime in the summer or fall of 2022.  Meetings are held monthly, and are open to the public.  Members of the UPEC Board of Directors have attended some of these meetings, and have offered both spoken and written testimony in support of the best and most current science available, all of which points toward the senselessness of a wolf season in the UP. Interested persons can find specific information about these meetings at: https://www.michigan.gov/dnr/0,4570,7-350-79137_79763_106230---,00.html.

Gray wolf. (Photo © Andrew Ly. Courtesy UPEC)

UPEC will be closely following further developments, and will continue to advocate for federal protection of gray wolves in Michigan and elsewhere. Should wolves again be delisted, UPEC will continue to argue that there is no credible scientific basis for a so-called recreational season on wolves in Michigan.

* Editor's Note:

Co-author Jeff Towner is a Certified Wildlife Biologist and member of the board of directors of the Upper Peninsula Environmental Coalition (UPEC). See his Oct. 22, 2021, Keweenaw Now article, "Wolf management in Michigan should set good example," which also appeared in the UPEC Fall 2021 Newsletter.

Co-author Terri Bocklund is a professional musician, composer, and songwriter who became an advocate for wolves after her experience as an Artist in Residence on Isle Royale in 2013. That experience led her to create and perform a unique pro-wolf multi-media experience, which she has presented at the Wolf Conservation Center (NY), the Pennsylvania Wolf Sanctuary, the Upper Great Lakes Visitor Center (WI) and several state and national parks, including Isle Royale National Park.

Tuesday, February 15, 2022

Guest article: ENDANGERED: right to vote, right to fair and free elections

Voting rights advocates demonstrate at a vigil held near the Portage Lift Bridge in Houghton on Jan. 6, 2022. (Photo © and courtesy Allan Baker)* 

HOUGHTON -- Michigan is facing a deluge of voter suppression and election subversion legislation. Much of it has not become law. However, our state has an unusual system that allows citizens to circulate petitions to bypass the legislative process and the governor. The Secure MI Vote petition would create obstacles for voters and county and township clerks. Why would we want to change our voting system when it did what it was supposed to do: Run a fair and accurate election?

To find out, join a forum to discuss the Secure MI Vote petition circulating now. The forum will be via Zoom at 7 p.m. ET Wednesday, Feb. 16, when County Commissioner Glenn Anderson and County Clerk Jennifer Kelly join local citizens Susanna Peters and Faith Morrison to tell us what would happen should the petition drive be successful! Learn why you should NOT sign the petition whether or not the signature gatherers tell you its real reason. Do you want to restrict your right to vote and force onerous requirements on election officials to do their job?

Voting Rights Advocates Bill Binroth, Beth Flynn, and Horst Schmidt and the Justice Ministry of Keweenaw Unitarian Universalist Fellowship (KUUF) are sponsoring this forum.

ZOOM LINK: https://michigantech.zoom.us/j/83714962753

Or Telephone:
US: 1 312 626 6799
Meeting ID: 837 1496 2753
International numbers available: https://michigantech.zoom.us/u/kbva8pJ1q4

* Editor's Note: See excellent coverage of the Jan. 6, 2022, vigil by the Copper Beacon's Joshua Vissers: "Group forms for vigil despite cold Jan. 6 weather."

Monday, February 14, 2022

Guest Article: Speak Up for Lake Superior’s Bad River Watershed: Work to Save What You Love!

Lake Superior. (Photo courtesy Wisconsin Citizens Media Cooperative)

Posted Feb. 13, 2022, on Wisconsin Citizens Media Cooperative (WCMC)
Reprinted here with permission

A Zoom Webinar will be held from 6 p.m. - 7 p.m. (CT) / 7 p.m. - 8 p.m. (ET) on Monday, February 14. This second Webinar in WCMC's Kairos-supported* events focuses on the following:

  • What is included and what was omitted in the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resource’s draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) on the proposed re-routing of Enbridge Line 5
  • What points to highlight in written responses to the WI DNR within the public response period (closing on March 18, 2022)
  • Resources and toolkits for effective letters to the WI DNR and government leaders

Guest Speakers:

Marcia Bjornerud, professor of environmental studies and geosciences at Lawrence University, is a structural geologist. She has done field research in arctic and mainland Norway, arctic Canada, Scotland, New Zealand, Italy and the Lake Superior region, including the Gogebic Range/Penokee Hills. She has worked pro bono with the Great Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife Commission in challenging two mining projects in the Lake Superior watershed. In 2008, she was an expert witness in an administrative court case against the Eagle copper-nickel sulfide mine northwest of Marquette, Michigan. In 2012, she prepared a report for GLIFWC on the potential environmental effects of a proposed mountaintop removal iron mining project in the Gogebic Range and testified about this at a hearing at the Wisconsin State Capitol. She is a mother of three sons, an avid cross-country skier, and a wild food forager -- and once bicycled around Lake Superior with two friends (it took 13 days).

Philomena Kebec belongs to the Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa. She moved home 10 years ago to advocate for protection of watershed resources. Philomena is an elected Ashland County Supervisor and runs a small nonprofit, Badriverharmreduction.org, that provides services to prevent overdose and infection for people who use drugs. (She would welcome financial support for her nonprofit.) Philomena is deeply knowledgeable about the Bad River watershed and its residents.

Register in advance for this webinar at:
https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_JiGj1oHTSLan_zNjBvq-hQ

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

*A Webinar sponsored by First Congregational UCC Appleton with support from the Wisconsin UCC Creation Care Team and a Wisconsin Conference UCC’s Kairos/Catalyst grant.

Editor's Note: See also this Feb. 9 guest article from WCMC: "Guest Article: Citizens expose gross inadequacies in Enbridge Line 5 draft EIS, tell DNR to do their job."