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Aldo Leopold, a visionary conservationist, thought of reversing course as early as Canis lupus may have found their own way back eventually β natural reoccupation was likely, some experts believed, though how soon was uncertain. By the s, public interest in a reintroduction of the federally protected animals met the necessary political will.
Then, 30 years ago this month, amid global fanfare, federal biologists turned 14 adult wolves β wild animals captured and transplanted from the Canadian Rockies β loose in Yellowstone National Park. The memories and viewpoints presented have been organized and edited for brevity and clarity. In , Congress charged federal wildlife managers with studying a reintroduction of wolves, which were added to the endangered species list in Funding for another extensive study that would actually OK moving wolves β an environmental impact statement β came two years later, in In the ensuing two years, federal officials held public meetings and analyzed , comments.
Marc Racicot served as governor of Montana from until A former chair of the Republican National Committee and current advisory board member of the Mansfield Center at the University of Montana, Racicot remains active in political issues from his home in Helena. There was resistance on the side of those who opposed reintroduction, and there was enthusiasm on the other side. It actually was quite pitched β there was an intensity to it.
But those days were different than they are now, and even though it was frank, and candid, and to the point, it was also constructive. Renee Askins, founder of the Wolf Fund, was a crucial advocate for the reintroduction of wolves to Yellowstone National Park. She lives in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. The purpose of the Wolf Fund was the reintroduction of wolves to Yellowstone and essentially the coordination of both private and governmental entities and agencies.
Our regional and local [advocacy] efforts were vital, but it was creating the national momentum and interest that would essentially give cover to [Bruce Babbitt] the head of Interior [and] the head of the Park Service, William Penn Mott.