Exposing the Big Game /
Center for Biological Diversity
June 2014
Today’s decision opens a new chapter in the history of wolf recovery in America. It ensures that California, where there’s plentiful wolf habitat, will provide a safe haven for wolf families like the one OR-7 just started.
Huge news out of California today: The state wildlife commission just protected wolves under the state Endangered Species Act.
Today’s decision is the culmination of years of work by the Center for Biological Diversity, sparked by the arrival of wolf OR-7 in California in December 2011.
Image by Jim Robertson, Animals in the Wild
The timing couldn’t be better. Just hours before the commission’s decision, it was confirmed that OR-7 had pups in southern Oregon — a sign that this once-lone wolf is now establishing himself as a resident of the area, including Northern California.
This exciting win wouldn’t have happened without your thousands of letters, phone calls, trips to rallies and generous donations to our Predator Defense Fund.
We knew it would be an uphill climb when we filed our petition to protect wolves in California in February 2012, but there was no other choice: If these expanding wolf populations were going to survive, they’d need protection from guns and traps.
Today’s decision opens a new chapter in the history of wolf recovery in America. It ensures that California, where there’s plentiful wolf habitat, will provide a safe haven for wolf families like the one OR-7 just started.
We know it won’t be long before the howl of wolves, silenced in California for nearly a century, will be heard there once more.
Thank you from all of us at the Center for Biological Diversity.
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