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 For Immediate Release, June 30, 2015 Contact: Noah  Greenwald, (503) 484-7495, [email protected]  U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Rejects Plan to Reclassify  Wolves, Keep Wolf Recovery Going WASHINGTON— The U.S. Fish and Wildlife  Service today denied a petition to reclassify nearly all gray wolves in the  lower 48 states as “threatened” under the Endangered Species Act — a step that  would continue federal oversight and funding for wolf recovery and encourage  the development of a national recovery plan. The reclassification would also have  given the Fish and Wildlife Service flexibility to permit state and local  wildlife managers to address specific wolf conflicts. The agency denied the request, saying the  wolves in the petition — all of them in the contiguous United States except for  Mexican gray wolves — didn’t constitute a “distinct population segment,” even  though they’ve been classified that way since 1978. “These wolves deserve a real shot at full  recovery across the country, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is doing  its best to make sure that never happens,” said Noah Greenwald, endangered  species director at the Center for Biological Diversity. “The Service's claim  that wolves don't constitute a distinct population is ludicrous and totally  belied by the fact they've been considered distinct in the lower 48 for more  than three decades.” Gray wolves are currently  protected as endangered throughout their range in the lower 48 states, except in  Minnesota, where they are listed as threatened, and Montana, Idaho, eastern  Oregon and Washington, where they have no Endangered Species Act protections. Some  members of Congress are pushing legislation to remove all Endangered Species  Act protections for wolves. The reclassification petition  filed by conservation groups in January proposed an alternative path to  finalizing wolf recovery based on the best available science, rather than  politics and fear, and would help to find a balanced middle ground on a  controversial issue that has been battled out in the courts and in states with  diverse views among stakeholders on wolf conservation. “Sadly the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service  seems content to let politicians in Congress, rather than scientists, decide  the future of wolf recovery in the United States,” Greenwald said. “Denying the  petition to reclassify wolves is yet another sign this agency is hoping to wash  its hands of wolf recovery and leave the job unfinished forever.” The Center for Biological Diversity is a  national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 900,000 members  and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild  places.             |