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Where Friends of Bears Foresee Slaughter, Homeowners See Defense Against Invasion[hunt starts today]
NY Times ^ | December 8, 2003 | ROBERT HANLEY

Posted on 12/08/2003 3:48:13 AM PST by Pharmboy

To the pro-hunt residents of northwestern New Jersey, the black bears have become too close, too bold and too dangerous.

The bears, they say, routinely roam backyards and sometimes barge into houses looking for food — usually household garbage, but occasionally pork chops and brownies. The bears wander around playgrounds and bus stops, frightening children. And they have killed pet rabbits, goats and sheep.

To those weary, and wary, of living with black bears, New Jersey's first bear hunt since 1970 is long overdue.

"We do have a definite problem with the bears, and we need to do whatever is necessary to get the problem under control," said Roy Wherry, the police chief in Vernon, a growing rural town that has had many problems with bears.

To members of animal welfare groups and many residents of the towns with bear problems, the six-day hunt scheduled to start today is a sop to hunting and gun advocates.

They argue that black bears are, by nature, docile, nonpredatory, and easily frightened animals. They say people who want a rural lifestyle should learn to adapt to the bears' presence and can minimize conflicts with bears, primarily by putting their garbage in steel cans with lids the bears cannot open.

Foes of the hunt say it will fail to reduce the presence of so-called nuisance bears because they roam woodlands that are near homes and legally off limits to hunters.

"Bears are not a public safety threat in New Jersey, but thousands of bear hunters in our woods are the real danger," said Sue Russell, policy director of a group based in New Jersey called the Center for Animal Protection.

The verbal cross-fire between the two sides intensified as the hunt approached. Rumors began circulating that some zealous foes of the hunt might traipse into the woods with music blaring from boom-boxes to pester hunters and scare off bears.

The state's environmental commissioner, Bradley M. Campbell, cautioned against such confrontations, warning at a press conference that New Jersey has a hunter-harassment law and that state conservation officers, rangers and state troopers would take to the woods to enforce it. Fines range from $100 to $500, he said.

Several of the groups seeking to protect bears from hunters banded together for an 11th-hour legal effort, appealing to both federal and state judges to ban the hunt on environmental grounds in the 31,000-acre New Jersey portion of a national park along the Delaware River, and in state-owned parks and forests. The coalition was at least partly successful in federal court in Washington on Friday. The national park, the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area, was ordered closed to bear hunters until at least midday tomorrow.

Although a two-judge state appeals panel refused to bar hunting in state-owned parks and forests, the State Supreme Court said late Friday that it would review any motion to close the parks later in the week if any appeals were filed by noon today. Before the rulings, Mr. Campbell brushed off the potential impact, saying the federal and state parks and forests amounted to only about 100,000 of the 1 million acres in the designated hunting district between Interstates 78 and 287.

As for the weekend storm that left those woodlands full of snow, it could make it easier for hunters to track bears, but harder for them to remove any bears they kill.

Foes took their anti-hunt message to shopping malls and to Gov. James E. McGreevey's office in the State House and his home in Princeton. The Humane Society of the United States said it would give the state $100,000 to promote nonlethal ways of controlling the bear population if the governor stepped in and stopped the hunt, as his predecessor, Christie Whitman, did in 2000.

Mr. McGreevey was not swayed by the money. The anti-hunt groups accused him of hypocrisy, noting that he had called for cancellation of a proposed bear hunt at the start of his campaign for governor in 2000 but is doing nothing to prevent the current hunt.

The governor's office repeated Mr. McGreevey's months-old response to such criticism: He is personally opposed to the hunt but will not interfere with it because he believes it is the best way to deal with the risks the bears pose.

"At this point, I believe the governor recognizes the issue of public safety has to trump personal preferences," Mr. Campbell said.

Groups opposed to the hunt also refocused on a question that has lingered for months: Just how many black bears live in New Jersey? No one, it seems, knows for certain.

Last spring, state wildlife biologists reported the population at 3,278, based on their studies of bear reproductive rates and the home range of individual bears. Black bear experts who analyzed the figures at the state's request early this year called the biologists' figure exaggerated. They said that it was based on flawed studies, and they estimated that the population was closer to 1,350.

Documents accompanying the lawsuit to stop the hunt in the Delaware Water Gap park noted that a different team of state wildlife biologists estimated in 2000 that the state had 1,000 black bears and predicted then that the number would grow to 2,000 by 2006.

Mr. Campbell acknowledged the uncertainty about the numbers in a press conference last week. He said his staff's "working assumption" now is that the state's bear population ranges between 2,000 and 3,000.

Hunt critics say the size of the population is an important issue. If the true number of bears is closer to 1,300 and too many are killed this week, the recovery of the bear population could be seriously harmed. Regular hunting seasons in the 1950's and 1960's nearly wiped out black bears in the state, leading to the cancellation of bear hunting in 1970.

The state has not set a kill quota for the new hunt. But Mr. Campbell said last week that he would cancel the hunt at any point in its six-day schedule if he believed that an excessive number of bears had been killed.

In recent days, Mr. Campbell has tried to counter arguments against the planned hunt by citing support for it. Last week, his office released letters from environmental officials in New York and Pennsylvania that praised the hunt. The letters said that New Jersey bears routinely roam into those states, adding to the problems posed by native bears. New Jersey's hunt will help bear-management programs in New York's and Pennsylvania, the letters said.

Late last month, Mr. Campbell invited reporters to his office to interview some northwestern New Jersey residents and officials eager for a bear reduction.

Kari Civitan of Frankford said she routinely sees three to five bears a day in her yard and automatically sets off her car alarm to scare them before leaving home to drive to the supermarket. Bill Shelton, the superintendent of schools in Stillwater, a little town with plenty of bears, said school officials had tried all the recommended ways of keeping bears from school garbage bins. They include putting locks and chains on the lids of Dumpsters and pouring ammonia inside, blasting air horns at bears and calling the police to shoot rubber pellets at them. But nothing has worked. "They keep coming back," he said.

Chief Wherry of Vernon said some schoolchildren had begun carrying bagged lunches in their hands instead of in their backpacks. "If they do encounter a bear," he said, "they can throw them their lunch."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; US: New Jersey; US: New York; US: Pennsylvania
KEYWORDS: animalrights; bearhunt; bears; environment; greenpeace; hunting; peta; suburbs
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To: Jaysun
Not pickin' on you, but merely wanting to show the craziness of the numbers:

Wild creatures kill a FEW human children (horribly) and the folks are stormin' the castle....

A few 'educated, professional' humans(?) kill MILLIONS (horribly) and there is barely a whimper....

21 posted on 12/08/2003 2:11:19 PM PST by Elsie (Don't believe every prophecy you hear: especially *** ones........)
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To: Pharmboy
Just send the Green Bay Packers over there......they'll have those Bears with their tails between their legas in no time!

Lando

22 posted on 12/08/2003 2:28:42 PM PST by Lando Lincoln (I'm thinkin', I'm thinkin'....)
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To: Pharmboy
Bet you didn't know that Bears have "legas", did you??

Lando

23 posted on 12/08/2003 2:29:58 PM PST by Lando Lincoln (I'm thinkin', I'm thinkin'....)
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To: Elsie
I agree that abortion and those that perpetuate it are sickening.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1036166/posts

However, I'm not sure how that relates to animals. I care for animals as much as the next guy, but I don't agree with "animal rights" advocates or environmentalist in that I consider humans far more important. You see, when an environmentalist straps himself to a tree in the middle of nowhere to prevent someone from continuing a road to their property, that environmentalist is basically saying that the tree is more important than the other person. We've made progress by shaping the land to our benefit and by using animals for our gain. That's the way that it should be. So, if bears are killing people or disturbing people, I say let the king of the jungle (man) prevail.
24 posted on 12/08/2003 4:34:33 PM PST by Jaysun (Get real, Control-Everybody-But-Yourselves freaks!)
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To: Jaysun
However, I'm not sure how that relates to animals.

Right...... it don't!!!!


Our wonderful, caring GUMMINT says that unborn babies are LOWER than the animals.

I happen to know different:

Psalms 8
 
 1.  O LORD, our Lord, how majestic is your name in all the earth! You have set your glory above the heavens.
 2.  From the lips of children and infants you have ordained praise because of your enemies, to silence the foe and the avenger.
 3.  When I consider your heavens, the work of your fingers, the moon and the stars, which you have set in place,
 4.  what is man that you are mindful of him, the son of man that you care for him?
 5.  You made him a little lower than the heavenly beings and crowned him with glory and honor.
 6.  You made him ruler over the works of your hands; you put everything under his feet:
 7.  all flocks and herds, and the beasts of the field,
 8.  the birds of the air, and the fish of the sea, all that swim the paths of the seas.
 9.  O LORD, our Lord, how majestic is your name in all the earth!

25 posted on 12/08/2003 10:31:36 PM PST by Elsie (Don't believe every prophecy you hear: especially *** ones........)
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To: Elsie
I happen to know different.

JER 1:4-5

4 Then the word of the Lord came to me, saying:
5 "Before I formed you in the womb I knew you; Before you were born I sanctified you;

As clear as it gets. 45 MILLION babies exterminated by the fascists in the U.S. alone since the tortuous murder became legal.

26 posted on 12/08/2003 10:40:49 PM PST by Indie (Just because you believe in conspiracies doesn't mean they aren't really after you.)
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To: Indie
How shall WE escape?

The German population claimed they didn't know what was happening to the Jews....

We KNOW what is happening to the innocent, and only a very few feel adamantly enough about it to throw THEIR lives away in an attempt to save at least a few.

27 posted on 12/09/2003 7:36:07 AM PST by Elsie (Don't believe every prophecy you hear: especially *** ones........)
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To: Pharmboy
A similar face-off occurred last year in Santa Barbara, CA. The story was widely reported in the local press. In the Santa Barbara story, a bear behaved aggressively toward a boy in his family's hot tub. This family lived in the mountains over-looking Santa Barbara. The parents applied for a permit to kill the bear and that is when all hell broke loose.

All the lefties started harrassing the family, sending threatening e-mail and making threatening phone calls. The funny thing that went unreported is that the target of the bear's bad attitude and the bear loving harrassers were themselves Clinton Loving Pinkos.

The people who applied to kill the bear were both school teachers at Santa Ynez High School. The wife is a very vocal pro-Title IX feminist.

This very liberal couple who applied for the permit to kill the bear tried to explain to the folks threatening them that normally they would agree with the bear defenders, but since their child was threatened they felt compelled to take drastic action. Of course no one believed they were good greenies driven by neccessity to protect their children. Since they worked in Santa Ynez, people assumed they were gunslinging cowboys.

Some time dring the shouting match the bear disappeared, never to be seen again, but the school teachers remain personas non gratis in Santa Barbara. I have altered a popular cliche to sum up the episode: "A conservative is a liberal whose child was attacked by a bear."

28 posted on 12/09/2003 8:00:09 AM PST by Zevonismymuse
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To: Pharmboy

29 posted on 12/11/2003 10:09:44 AM PST by mirkwood (If we stop voting, will they go away?)
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