It's game time: Alaska Board of Game meets in Fairbanks
by Tim Mowry / tmowry@newsminer.com
6 months ago | 1607 views | 11 11 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
FAIRBANKS — Allowing hunters to shoot calf and cow moose.

Expanding or eliminating a no-trapping buffer zone that was established to protect wolves that travel outside Denali National Park and Preserve.

Using bait to hunt grizzly bears.

Letting hunters use radios and airplanes to hunt Delta bison.

Requiring trappers to check their traps every three days.

Those are just a handful of the issues the Alaska Board of Game will take up when it begins a 10-day meeting today at the Westmark Hotel in Fairbanks to consider more than 130 proposals regarding hunting and trapping regulations in the Interior.

“There’s something for everyone in this one,” Fairbanks board member Al Barrette said.

The meeting begins at 8:30 a.m. with staff reports from the Department of Fish and Game and other agencies before public testimony on individual proposals begins sometime in the afternoon. Public testimony is expected to last through much, if not all, the weekend.

“My guess is we’ll get plenty of people that want to talk,” department spokeswoman Cathie Harms said.

The deadline to sign up to testify before the board is 4 p.m. Saturday.

One of the issues expected to provoke discussion is the Denali buffer zone, a 122 square-mile area of state land surrounding the northeast boundary of Denali National Park and Preserve in which wolf trapping is prohibited.

The buffer zone has been a controversial topic since it was put in place by the game board 10 years ago. Advocates of the buffer zone contend that it protects wolves that stray outside the park so tourists can see them in the summer and should be expanded. Critics say there is no biological reason for the buffer zone because the park’s wolf population is healthy.

There are 12 proposals pertaining to the buffer zone, seven to eliminate it and five to expand it. One of the latter is from the National Park Service.

“Certainly the buffer zone is going to bring out some testimony,” Harms said. “That’s always a popular topic.”

It’s popular enough that Priscilla Feral, president of the animal-rights group Friends of Animals, is flying to Fairbanks from Connecticut to testify in support of expanding the buffer zone. Feral said her presence is “a tip of the hat to Gordon Haber,” the independent biologist who studied Denali wolves for 40-plus years and was a strong advocate of a bigger buffer zone before he was killed in a plane crash in October while tracking wolves in Denali.

The subject of shooting cow and calf moose also is likely to create some heated debate, said Fairbanks-area biologist Don Young.

There are at least two proposals that would allow hunters to shoot calf moose in certain areas around Fairbanks, and the department also is proposing to continue large-scale cow moose hunts in three areas of Game Management Unit 20.

“Some people like them and some people don’t,” Young said of cow moose hunts.

As for calf hunts, Young said the department supports an amended proposal that would allow hunters to take calves in some areas but not cows accompanied by calves. Currently, hunters are prohibited from taking calves or cows accompanied by calves in most areas.

“We think it’s appropriate from a biological and intensive management standpoint,” Young said.

The Fairbanks Fish and Game Advisory Committee, however, has a different view.

“We’re still opposed to hunting calves except in a couple areas for safety reasons,” committee representative Mike Tinker said. “We still don’t want to harvest calves for freezer reasons.”

Contact staff writer Tim Mowry at 459-7587.

comments (11)
« oldowl wrote on Saturday, Feb 27 at 09:44 AM »
Re Chena Steamer's comment: if we didn't "tinker" with Alaska's resources and access to them we wouldn't have many resources. Have you forgotten the history of the west, the disappearance of the buffalo, etc. Also remember this the hunters and trappers are in the minority in this state. The wolves and other wildlife in Denali contribute to our economy through tourism, the main source of income in the Denali borough. The jobs and income generated at Denali far surpass the benefits to a few hunters and trappers (i.e. the one on the North border of the park.)
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« JoeParks wrote on Friday, Feb 26 at 04:32 PM »
The non-consuptive user is well represented in Alaska.

If you don't think so, go to Denali National park, 6 million acres

closed to hunters. And there is several millions more 'Parkland'

acres closed to hunting, Oh,, and fishing too !

Dept of commerce helps on the 'tourism'. !!!

Humane society, peta,IOJXI for pet owners, animal welfare. !!!

Do you need help setting up your camera tripod ?????
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« Theabowman wrote on Friday, Feb 26 at 12:00 PM »
The makeup of the current Board of Game is a joke--only one person from the Interior and absolutely no one representing any of the non-consumptive user groups--tourism, animal welfare, pet owners, photography, none of those folks have any representation whatsover. It's a waste of time to go to the meeetings. A better use of time is to work, put a little money aside to support a better governor when election time rolls around who will appoint a diverse group to the Board of Game.
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« anonymous wrote on Friday, Feb 26 at 11:36 AM »
Feral should save PETA the air fare. It should be obvious even to her group by now, that her in-put is usually so extreme, and so poorly informed, that she harms the arguements of more reasonable people trying to advocate for expanded protection.

Cow and calve hunts, eh? Have they 'over-seekinized' moose management again? And aerial bison hunting. Not much value on actual 'hunting' involved, just meat harvest for those with the $$$.
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« Rms123 wrote on Friday, Feb 26 at 10:33 AM »
So we have one guy on the board from north of the Alaska Range (huge area)? So basically the Anchorage area is controlling the game in our area?!?!?! Hmmmm not much of a surprise, but kind of crappy in my opinion. I think what needs to be discussed here is a GB made up of representatives from specific areas, Break the state down into several zones, and pick a representative from each zone. The current way the board is chosen is ridiculous. I think I'm going to talk to my representitive.
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« out_in_the_cold wrote on Friday, Feb 26 at 09:38 AM »
Yep, think there are more words in the Alaska Board of Game proposal booklet for the Interior 2010 meeting, than were in the federal economic stimulus bill.

http://www.boards.adfg.state.ak.us/gameinfo/meetinfo/2009-2010/interior-2010/bog-interior2010.pdf
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« oldowl wrote on Friday, Feb 26 at 09:33 AM »
I would like to comment on this issue - however as soon as I make a comment the article gets moved to the archives or disappears entirely. Censorship?
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« Valdezcreek wrote on Friday, Feb 26 at 07:48 AM »
no to any buffer zone for wolves, if the people or the park service need to try and keep their wolves alive then put a fence around Denali, they have 6.4 million acres of a wolf zone to keep their wolves in... NO TO BUFFER ZONES...
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« Alaskan wrote on Friday, Feb 26 at 07:06 AM »
Can the meeting be listened to online?
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« MP210 wrote on Friday, Feb 26 at 06:41 AM »
Its because of the lowering of the density of the fish and wildlife that the access needs to be regulated.

I say lets just kill everything off, then there will be no more need for constricting regulations on the freedoms of the populace.
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« ChenaSteamer wrote on Thursday, Feb 25 at 10:37 PM »
Why do we have to increasingly Tinker with Alaskans access to our fish and game resources? For such a large state with such a low density of population we are increasingly hindered as citizens of this state.

Remember this simple rule:

Figures don't lie

Liars figure
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