Light Rain
56°
Morris, IL
Light Rain|Forecast »

New Jersey’s bear hunt a source of contention

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(MCT) — Black-bear hunting season started a half hour before the crack of dawn on Monday, and on the surface, the decade-long battles involving state wildlife staff, animal-rights activists, hunter groups and the state’s courts are over.

The state notes it has a scientifically based bear management plan as mandated by the courts, that plan includes hunting, and that’s that.

But animal rights advocates, now relegated to the fringes of the hunt, still are mounting challenges: This year, they’re lobbying for support of a state bill, proposed Thursday, that would ban hunters from “baiting” bears with food, and also require residents of “Bear Country” communities — core bear habitat in North Jersey’s Highlands — to use bear-resistant trash containers. Such measures would make it harder to kill a bear, and cut down on the kind of nuisance incidents used to justify the hunt.

Two leading advocacy groups, The Bear Education and Resource Group and Animal Protection League of New Jersey, say they will not bring a legal challenge to this year’s hunt. A state appeals court last year upheld the state Department of Environmental Protection’s bear management policy. DEP staffers say the plan, which includes an annual hunt, is working, proven by reductions in the bear population and bear-human encounters.

They estimate there are 2,800 to 3,000 black bears living in North Jersey, down from 3,400 two years ago. Bear sightings have dropped 34 percent, damage and nuisance complaints decreased 26 percent and dangerous incidents declined 43 percent through the end of October, compared with the same time last year.

Susan E. Russell of the Animal Protection League said protests at key hunting areas have again been scheduled, but she acknowledged the hunt was here to stay — so long, she argued, as Governor Chris Christie is in office.

“Governor Christie promised this hunting group a bear hunt if he were elected governor, and they worked for his election, and he’s not going to renege,” she said.

The big issue for activists this year is baiting. New Jersey lets hunters lay down bait for deer and bears, although baiting is banned on federal parklands in the state. It’s a practice that is controversial because it is seen as an unsportsmanlike way to kill an animal. Opponents say it also can have the undesired effects of conditioning bears to associate food with people. Of the 28 states that allow bear hunting, 18 do not allow baiting for bear. They include New York and Pennsylvania.

Previous Page|1|||

Comments


Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all