Idaho
Related: About this forumIdaho Legislature rejects new science standards
BOISE -- Idaho lawmakers have rejected new K-12 science standards after receiving criticism over how the rules - which for the first time include global warming and evolution components - were finalized.
The Senate Education Committee spiked the proposed rules Monday after a House panel also rejected the same proposals earlier this session. This means state officials must start the rule-making process over again.
Tim Corder, special assistant to state schools Superintendent Sherri Ybarra, says the department requested the rules rejection to allow more time for public comment, adding that the department did not violate any laws while drafting this year's proposed science rules.
Science teachers, state officials and other stakeholders spent last summer drafting new science standards. The State Board of Education approved the rules in August.
http://www.ktvb.com/news/local/capitol-watch/idaho-legislature-rejects-new-science-standards/37223163
This, following a 'bag ban ban'. They're on a roll.
dchill
(40,475 posts)2naSalit
(92,705 posts)over an f'ing myth.
It's part of the weenie wavin' hard core wolf haters showing that they hate the gubbamint too and they can get the state to do stupid sh*t for them... and they're also friends of the felons at the Malheur.
IDemo
(16,926 posts)February 8, 2016
VICTOR, Idaho Ignoring recent research indicating Idaho officials could be overestimating the states wolf population, the U.S. Department of Agricultures Wildlife Services announced plans today to allow gunners in helicopters to start shooting wolves in the Lolo Elk Management Zone of the Clearwater National Forest in Idaho.
The renewed wolf slaughter comes on the heels of a petition filed by the Center for Biological Diversity and four other conservation organizations questioning the accuracy of wolf estimates by state officials and asking the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service to continue monitoring wolf populations in Idaho and Montana for another five years. The Service has yet to respond to the petition, which was spurred, in part, by a recent study published in the journal Science that questions the accuracy of wolf counts in the two states. But the information released today shows that Idaho will aerially gun wolves in the Lolo Zone for the third year in a row, as the Idaho legislature requests another $400,000 to kill wolves for the 2016-2017 fiscal year.
http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/news/press_releases/2016/wolf-02-08-2016.html
2naSalit
(92,705 posts)Press release from yesterday
Moscow, ID Aerial gunning of wild wolves is underway in remote and rugged areas of the Clearwater National Forest, conducted by the federal Wildlife Services agency at the behest of the Idaho Fish & Game Department. The government is using helicopters to kill wolves in the so-called Lolo Zone, which covers portions of the Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness and stretches north across the North Fork Clearwater drainage. Approximately 50 wolves have been killed from the air in the Lolo Zone since 2011, despite the low wolf population in the area and throughout the state.
Aerial gunning operations are occurring in remote areas of the Clearwater National Forest. The North Fork Clearwater contains close to 1-million acres of roadless public wildlands that qualify for wilderness designation. These wildlands offer some of the best habitat for large carnivores in the entire Lower 48. Despite this, the IDFG seems to be trying to sanitize the wild landscape for game animals.
The Idaho Fish & Game Department is wrongfully blaming the decline of elk populations in the Lolo Zone on native carnivores, including gray wolves, said Gary MacFarlane, Ecosystem Defense Director of the Friends of the Clearwater. Everyone, including the Idaho Fish and Game Department, knows the decline is due to long-term habitat changes in that area. Targeting predators like recovering gray wolves is unscientific, wont work to boost elk numbers and violates the wildness of these public lands.
Excellent habitat for native predators like gray wolves, lynx, wolverines, and fisher exists throughout the Clearwater National Forest, including in the Lolo Zone, said Ken Cole, Idaho Director of Western Watersheds Project. But the Idaho Fish & Game Department wants to turn this wild country into an elk farm and thats ridiculous and inappropriate.
*snip*
a lot more at link:
http://www.thewildlifenews.com/2016/02/08/wolves-in-idahos-lolo-zone-being-gunned-down-by-government/