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Senate approves McBroom bill requiring only U.P. representation on state wolf panel

Two wolf pups are shown on Isle Royale National Park in Michigan. The Michigan Senate on Thursday approved legislation that would require that each member of the state’s Wolf Management Advisory Council be a resident of the Upper Peninsula unless wolves become present in the Lower Peninsula, according to a news release from the office of state Sen. Ed McBroom, R-Waucedah Township.(AP photo)

LANSING — The Michigan Senate on Thursday approved legislation that would require that each member of the state’s Wolf Management Advisory Council be a resident of the Upper Peninsula unless wolves become present in the Lower Peninsula, according to a news release from the office of state Sen. Ed McBroom, R-Waucedah Township.

“Michigan’s entire known wolf population is in the U.P., yet nearly all the members of the state’s Wolf Management Advisory Council are from downstate,” McBroom, who sponsored Senate Bill 486, said in the release. “Unless or until the wolf population moves south of the bridge, for the council to be fair and to be a better representation of reality, its members need to be from the U.P. Plain and simple. U.P. residents representing all five of the specific stakeholders this panel calls for are readily available and have the intelligence and desire to serve.”

According to the Department of Natural Resources, the council is an advisory body that makes recommendations on wolf management in the state. including a possible hunting and trapping season. It was recently re-established after the federal government removed gray wolves from the threatened and endangered species list, officials said.

The state announced appointments to the council, composed of representatives from organizations in conservation, hunting, agriculture, animal advocacy and tribal government.

“However, only one appointee was from the U.P,” officials said in the release. “This is in stark contrast to other advisory panels that are typically made up of residents directly impacted by the land or wildlife issue they are tasked to provide advice.”

If signed into law, McBroom’s bill would require all council members to reside in the U.P. unless the DNR determined through winter track surveys and genetic testing that wolves became present in the Lower Peninsula. If that were to occur, then only a majority of council members would have to be residents of the U.P., according to McBroom’s office. SB 486 now moves to the House of Representatives for consideration.

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