New Jersey Nixes Planned Bear Hunt
http://cnn.netscape.cnn.com/news/st...1/1945693047.htm&sc=1110&flok=NW_5-L1
TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - The state's environmental commissioner has rejected nearly 3,000 applications for bear hunting permits, saying a bear hunt set by New Jersey's Fish and Game Council earlier this year will not take place.
The game council voted in July to include a six-day bear hunt in the state's December hunting schedule, despite objections from Department of Environmental Protection Commissioner Bradley Campbell. The council then began making permit applications available to hunters.
Campbell, who advocates other ways to control the bears' numbers, responded by saying the DEP will not honor the approximately 2,900 applications that have been submitted.
The governor-appointed Fish and Game Council sets the state's hunting schedule, but the DEP's Division of Fish and Wildlife issues permits.
The move has angered hunting enthusiasts, some of whom threatened to sue.
New Jersey held its first bear hunt in 33 years last December, which Campbell supported at the time to thin the bears' ranks.
He now supports using contraception - and programs teaching residents how to coexist with bears - to control the population, which numbers about 1,500.
http://cnn.netscape.cnn.com/news/st...1/1945693047.htm&sc=1110&flok=NW_5-L1
TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - The state's environmental commissioner has rejected nearly 3,000 applications for bear hunting permits, saying a bear hunt set by New Jersey's Fish and Game Council earlier this year will not take place.
The game council voted in July to include a six-day bear hunt in the state's December hunting schedule, despite objections from Department of Environmental Protection Commissioner Bradley Campbell. The council then began making permit applications available to hunters.
Campbell, who advocates other ways to control the bears' numbers, responded by saying the DEP will not honor the approximately 2,900 applications that have been submitted.
The governor-appointed Fish and Game Council sets the state's hunting schedule, but the DEP's Division of Fish and Wildlife issues permits.
The move has angered hunting enthusiasts, some of whom threatened to sue.
New Jersey held its first bear hunt in 33 years last December, which Campbell supported at the time to thin the bears' ranks.
He now supports using contraception - and programs teaching residents how to coexist with bears - to control the population, which numbers about 1,500.