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Dear
MFOA Member and Supporter,
In this 15th anniversary year
of Maine Friends of Animals, we can celebrate significant victories, but we're also
aware of what remains unaccomplished. Cruel practices that motivated our early
wildlife protection efforts are still with us.
The hunting lobby mistakenly
targets coyotes as the primary cause of declining deer populations and
continually introduces inhumane, ineffective legislation to permit the shooting,
trapping bounties and snaring of these natural predators on a massive scale.
Despite the fact that
wildlife biologists are nearly unanimous in their opinions that coyote
management does not work, the hunting lobby persists.
A long
history of opposing brutal practices
More than a decade ago, MFOA submitted
legislation to ban both the snaring and trapping of coyotes, and we helped spearhead
a two-year campaign to raise public awareness about coyote snaring and to end
support for it.
A necropsy study of snared coyotes conducted by Maine's Department of
Inland Fisheries and Wildlife in 2001 provided conclusive evidence of the intense
suffering inflicted by snares. The study reported that:
"Hemorrhaging was evident in most of the
coyotes' swollen heads. Their eyes and mouths were bloody, their lips split and
their teeth broken from trying to chew their way out of the snare. There were
broken limbs resulting from long struggling. And in many cases, because the
coyote had not strangled to death and was not even dead when the snarer
returned, it was clubbed to death."
End
cruelty, support science-based management
Snaring of coyotes in Maine was curtailed in
2003 because of federal concerns about endangered Canadian Lynx that had been
found in snares. But the hunting lobby
remains undeterred. Only a year ago, I testified on behalf of MFOA before the
legislature against five ill-conceived coyote "management" bills involving snaring,
night hunting and a coyote bounty permit.
Reminding the committee that:
"We heavily debated coyote killing in 2001-2002
and nothing has changed since then. This program was ineffectual, extremely
cruel, a waste of taxpayer dollars, and one the department (I.F. & W.) does
not believe in nor wishes to administer."
We will continue to fight this needless legislation and antiquated
thinking, but we need your help. It takes money to keep the facts in front of
the legislature, media and the public.
Join our effort to end
needless cruelty to coyotes and other wildlife by making a donation to MFOA
today. Contribute via the enclosed
envelope or by visiting our website http://www.mfoa.net/membership_donations.html.
Education is vital
History shows that
attempts to control coyote populations by bounties, snaring, open season and trapping
do not work because coyotes are so biologically and behaviorally
adaptable. One of the nation's foremost
writers on the outdoors, Ted Williams, calls such efforts "ill-conceived,
ineffective and inhumane."
MFOA favors the
adoption of the most current science-based practices, including habitat
restoration and other foresting practices, to restore the deer population. We
also encourage people to learn to live in harmony with our fellow creatures,
including coyotes. Educational resources
include the "Misunderstood Coyote" in our 2011 newsletter: (http://www.mfoa.net/images/stories/mfoanewsletter_2011.pdf)
and, if you would like a more in-depth understanding of these animals, Coyotes in Our Midst: Coexisting with an
Adaptable and Resilient Carnivore by Camilla Fox.
Determined
advocacy creates change
The animal-protection
victories achieved by MFOA over the last 15 years are proof that we can change
minds and change policies, but we must have financial resources to continue our
legislative and educational work. Please help Maine's
leading animal protection organization in our continuing efforts to give voice
to Maine's
animals.
Please donate today!
We are grateful for
your support.
Robert
Fisk, Jr.
President &
Director
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