Updated: Friday, 13 Nov 2009, 2:40 PM MST
Published : Friday, 13 Nov 2009, 2:40 PM MST
ALBUQUERQUE (AP) - The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and environmentalists have
reached an agreement Friday that scraps a controversial rule the
agency had used to kill or permanently remove any wolf that killed
three heads of livestock in a year.
Fish and Wildlife spokesman Tom Buckley says the rule "will
no longer stand."
He says the agency has ways to deal with livestock kills "and
remains committed to assisting the local livestock operators in any
negative impacts they may have related to wolves."
Environmentalists complained the three-strikes rule favored
the ranching industry and was a major roadblock to the effort to
recover the species in the wild. Ranchers responded the policy
targets wolves that grow accustomed to preying on cattle.
Several environmental groups sued in May 2008, asking the
U.S. District Court in Arizona to stop the removal policy.