The limited resources of the game department should be spent on species protection and law enforcement, not on encouraging more people to take up hunting. If this is beyond their resources and expertise, the Game Department, as well as the Game Commission should be abolished, transferring the necessary functions to professional departments.

Predator-killing contests and killing Yellowstone wolves have become an
embarrassment to self-styled “ethical” hunters who promote their North
American Model of wildlife conservation. The Santa Fe New Mexican reported a
“Record number of Mexican wolves found dead in 2018,” one notoriously dying
at the hands of rancher Craig Thiessen. The Federal government, which
otherwise has not been protecting wolves, at least managed to revoke
Thiessen’s permit to run cows on public land.
State game departments estimate that hunters make up less than 5% of the
population, though their figures probably reflect their bias that they need
funding to offset declining revenue from license sales. In New Mexico and
around the country, hunter-conservationists are promoting a tax on the
non-hunting majority to bail out game departments. But even reliable
scientific studies show that only about 10% of the public hunts, including
those who don’t need a hunting license or don’t bother to purchase one.
Senators Heinrich and Udall both voted to confirm the departing Ryan Zinke
as Secretary of the Interior, as part of their campaign to make wilderness
areas like the Sabinoso more accessible to hunters. In a December 16
interview with the New Mexican, Udall recalls Zinke as “pledging to lead the
Interior Department in the tradition of Teddy Roosevelt.” Zinke exposed the
true nature of Teddy Roosevelt model of hunter conservation. Well-known for
big-game hunting, Roosevelt described his wolf-hunting experiences in his
book Hunting the Grisly and Other Sketches.
The dire situation of Mexican wolves did not start with Zinke, and will not
improve when he leaves. Zinke’s predecessor as Interior Secretary, Dan Ashe,
was more concerned about maintaining wolf populations in zoos than in the
wild, and he now serves as director of the Association of Zoos and
Aquariums. The cross-fostering program started by Ashe, and continuing under
Zinke, may provide better specimens for zoos,but it does little for a wild
wolf population. For genetic diversity Mexican wolves require a continuous
corridor through to Colorado.
Zinke’s successor, David Bernhardt, who calls himself “an avid hunter and
angler, ”served on the Virginia Board of Game. Like many of the outgoing New
Mexico Game Commissioners, Bernhardt represents the oil industry as well as
the hunting industry.
The United Nations Climate Conference estimates that the world has six to
twelve years to seriously address climate change, which affects wildlife as
well as humans. The World Wildlife Fund’s Living Planet Report estimates
that vertebrate populations have declined by 60% over the last 50 years. The
Trump Administration will only make matters worse, now that the Republican
victory in the midterms will all but guarantee confirmation of Trump’s
executive and judicial appointments.
Governor-Elect Lujan-Grisham and the incoming New Mexico legislature have
the opportunity to change state wildlife policy. Lujan-Grisham can appoint
Game Commissioners who are not beholden to hunting, trapping, livestock, and
oil interests. The legislature can outlaw coyote-killing contests, as well
as providing protection for coyotes and other species not currently
regulated by state law.
The limited resources of the game department should be spent on species
protection and law enforcement, not on encouraging more people to take up
hunting. If this is beyond their resources and expertise, the Game
Department, as well as the Game Commission should be abolished, transferring
the necessary functions to professional departments. The Department of
Public Safety can provide proper training and equipment for officers
entrusted with enforcing laws against poaching. Under the new state
administration, the Energy and Natural Resources Department can focus on
protecting wildlife and habitat, as well as making a transition to renewable
energy.