California Deer Spring 2014 | Page 14

Proposal to List the Gray Wolf as an Endangered Species in California On April 16, 2014, the California Fish and Game Commission met in Ventura and one of the agenda items included was whether or not to list the gray wolf as a threatened or endangered species in California. CDA President Jerry Springer was present and addressed the Commission regarding this subject with the following statement. Good Morning Commissioners I am Jerry Springer, the president of the California Deer Association and a member of the Wolf Stakeholders Working Group. The California Deer Association is one of the leading conservation organizations in California and our members have raised millions of dollars for the benefit of California’s deer herds and other wildlife. We have provided funds for wildlife habitat, research, education and law enforcement. Here are just a few of our hundreds of projects. We helped fund the purchase of the Big Chico Creek Ecological Reserve which saved 4,000 acres of habitat from development and now provides a place not only for wildlife but for research and education for students from K-12 through college. We invested more than a quarter million dollars to help the Department of Fish and Wildlife secure and improve the 5,100-acre Cañada de los Osos Ecological Reserve near Morgan Hill. We are investing thousands of dollars along with our members’ time, repairing 14 California Deer the water systems in one 30,000-acre section of the Carrizo Plains Ecological Reserve for the benefit of wildlife from the ground squirrel to the tule elk. Our members don’t just sit back and donate money, they get dirty too — they install guzzlers to supply needed water for wildlife throughout California and they have helped restore burned areas by planting thousands of bitterbrush plants. We also work with private landowners to help improve habitat for the benefit of the wildlife on their lands. If you look at our annual project reports you will see that our members just don’t talk-the-talk but they put their money and their backs into helping conserve California’s wildlife. I am proud to say that we have accomplished these things by working cooperatively with landowners, agencies and the public ─ not by lawsuits or threats of lawsuits. Today I am here not only representing those thousands of California Deer Association members, but also the thousands of members of the Mule Deer Foundation which is also a member of the Wolf Stakeholders Working Group. As a member of the Wolf Stakeholders Working Group, I have spent more than a year working with others in this room [