
Controversial Michigan program to lethally gas local Canada geese put on pause
Controversial Michigan program to lethally gas local Canada geese put on pause
A program aimed at controlling the local goose population via the capture and lethal gassing of the birds has been paused by Michigan's Department of Natural Resources.
M. Scott Bowen, director of the state agency, announced the decision in a response letter sent to Democratic lawmakers on May 9. An earlier letter sent by Sen. Dayna Polehanki (D-Livonia) and 11 cosigners in April had previously urged the DNR to reconsider the "capture and euthanasia" program, saying it was a "disproportionate, inhumane" response to nuisance complaints "mainly about goose droppings."
The legislation would allow residents with the correct permits to capture "nuisance Canada geese" for euthanasia during the species' flightless period of June 1 through July 1. Landowners seeking the permit to do so were required to have tried other non-lethal control methods first.
Addressed to the Natural Resources Committee, the appeal decried the intended solution that would "annually round up potentially 10,000 or more Canada geese and their goslings in their natural habitat during their summer molt (June and July) when they are flightless," according to the writers.
Program would allow 'lethally gassing' geese in 'portable gas chambers,' opponents say
Referred to as the "Canada Goose Program" on the Michigan DNR website, the initiative was passed on Oct. 10, 2024, and was set to begin in 2025. According to the program's FAQ page, it was designed to "give private landowners (including businesses and other commercial entities) options to address goose-human conflicts on their sites," saying Canada geese are "typically responsible for most conflicts" and that concerned have increase amid the spread of disease like the Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (or bird flu).
The program would allow residents to receive permits to destroy "nuisance" goose nests and eggs and would eliminate the relocation of geese after roundup, instead of requiring that any captured geese be killed. The program's "end goal" was to allow participants to pay to have meat from the geese processed, tested and donated, but in the meantime, the corpses would go to landfills.
This "roundup of Canada geese and their goslings and lethally gassing them inside portable gas chambers," as described by the lawmakers opposed to the program, was officially put on hold a week before the May 16 deadline for landowners to apply for the proper permits to participate.
It had previously been contested by local groups such as In Defense of Animals, which said on its website, encouraging residents to write to their representatives, "Michiganders have the power to stand up for geese and demand ethical, non-lethal management solutions in their own communities."
State still prioritizes non-lethal animal control, says director
The letter announcing the pause said the agency had been "working with the public to resolve human-goose conflicts for over 40 years" and that the pilot program was another effort toward that goal.
"After further consideration and consultation with our Wildlife staff, we have decided to pause the program for this year and will not be issuing any permits or conducting this work on any sites," said Bowen's letter. "We will continue to research alternative options for managing human-goose conflicts and health and human safety concerns forareas with overabundant Canada Goose populations."
The agency continues to prioritize non-lethal techniques, including habitat modification, elimination of feeding, scare tactics, repellents and nest/egg destruction, said the letter.
"It is important for the health and safety of our citizens and the management of our natural resources that we continue to use the goose management tools at our disposal," it continued.
The DNR shared a copy of the May 9 letter but did not provide further comment to USA TODAY.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Politico
33 minutes ago
- Politico
Conway's big money moves
Presented by TGIF, Illinois. It's National Donut Day! TOP TALKER MAYORAL INTRIGUE: Chicago Ald. Bill Conway's splashy fundraiser Thursday has folks wondering if he might have other political plans besides a reelection bid in 2027. The bash at the Hubbard Inn follows three other recent fundraisers at which Conway's campaign has raised nearly a half-million dollars from Chicago business, labor and philanthropic leaders. It's not the kind of donor attention seen in little-ol'-aldermanic races. Big donors already giving to his campaign include John Canning Jr. ($30,000), Citadel COO Gerald Beeson ($20,000), investor Adam Hanover ($20,000), developer Michael Reschke ($10,000) and Liam Krehbiel ($5,000), according to filings with the Illinois Board of Elections. Unions have been supporting, too, including SEIU Local 1, Operators Local 150, IBEW 134, Carpenters, Teamsters, Painters, Bricklayers and Ironworkers. What it means: Conway isn't ruling out a run for mayor. He joins a crowded field of interested potential candidates looking to challenge Mayor Brandon Johnson, who's also been ramping up his political operation ahead of 2027. Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias, state Comptroller Susana Mendoza, state Rep. Kam Buckner, County Treasurer Maria Pappas, fellow Ald. Andre Vasquez, government consultant John Kelly and businessman Willie Wilson are all mulling a mayoral bid. About Conway: His name popped up months ago as a possible mayoral candidate. Then there was chatter he had promised to pass on running for mayor if Giannoulias were to jump in — the two are friends going back to high school. But Conway shut down the buzz, telling Playbook in a statement, 'The only promise I've made to anyone is to keep doing everything I can in 2025 to make sure Chicago will succeed in 2027 and beyond.' Spotted: More than 100 guests and two dozen elected officials popped in for Thursday's event, including: Ald. Pat Dowell, state Sens. Mattie Hunter and Lakesia Collins, labor leaders Don Villar, Jonathan Jones and Pasquale Gianni; and political insiders David Namkung, Billy Lawless, Sydney Holman, Kevin Conlon and Markus Pitchford. THE BUZZ Members of the Illinois Freedom Caucus have filed a lawsuit challenging the process that led to the Democratic-led Illinois General Assembly passing a $55 billion budget just before midnight on May 31. Named in the lawsuit are Senate President Don Harmon and House Speaker Emanuel 'Chris' Welch, reports WAND TV's Mike Miletich, who has more on the lawsuit here. Late-night shenanigans: The conservative Republican lawmakers point to a rule that mandates that every bill must be read on three separate days in each chamber before it can be passed. 'Democrats ignored these rules to push through a record spending bill in the dead of the night when no one is paying attention,' according to a statement from the Freedom Caucus. We noted last week that the titles of the bills were introduced Thursday to make sure they met the three-day rule. It's a problem, say Republicans: 'Springfield insiders have resorted to taking unrelated bills, gutting them with amendments and forcing through thousands of pages of last-minute government spending — often just hours before a vote is called,' state Rep. Adam Niemerg said in a statement. Not the first time: The Republicans noted the Democratic majority has used the same tactic to pass the Protect Illinois Communities Act, SAFE-T Act and several recent state budgets. If you are John Canning, Playbook would like to hear from you! Email: skapos@ WHERE'S JB No official public events WHERE's BRANDON At 3410 West Lake Street at 2 p.m. for the Revolution Workshop ribbon-cutting — At the Harold Washington Cultural Center at 3:30 p.m. for the Urban Prep graduation ceremony — At 7801 South Throop Street at 4 p.m. for the Take Back the Block activation — At 35th and King Drive at 5 p.m. for the We Walk for Her March Where's Toni No official public events Have a tip, suggestion, birthday, new job or a (gasp!) complaint? Email skapos@ POLITICO PRO SPACE: Need an insider's guide to the politics behind the new space race? From battles over sending astronauts to Mars to the ways space companies are vying to influence regulators, this weekly newsletter decodes the personalities, policy and power shaping the final frontier. Try it for free for a limited time starting today. Find out more. BUSINESS OF POLITICS — Rahm Emanuel leans into relationships with Obama and Bill Clinton as he looks to the future, by POLITICO's Gregory Svirnovskiy …. ALSO: This week's episode of 'The Conversation with Dasha Burns' will have Emanuel in the hot seat. Watch the preview clip here. — State Sen. Cristina Castro announced on Thursday that she isn't going to run for Congress. Castro had been nudged to make a bid for the IL-08 District seat that opened up with Raja Krishnamoorthi running for U.S. Senate. 'After serious consideration and long conversations with my family, friends, and community — it's become clear to me that the Illinois General Assembly is where I can continue to make the most meaningful difference in the lives of those around me,' she said. Her full statement is here. — Endorsement: Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton has been endorsed in her bid for U.S. Senate by Illinois Democratic Central Committeewoman LaToya Greenwood. A former state rep, Greenwood served the East St. Louis region from 2017 to 2024. — NEW: Walter Adamczyk, the Republican Committeeman of the 29th Ward in Chicago, has announced he's running for Illinois secretary of state. Adamczyk is a community activist. In a statement announcing his bid, Adamczyk said he's committed to seeking 'effective government and full transparency' if elected. — Rachel Ruttenberg, a Democrat running for state Senate, will host a campaign kickoff Saturday in Evanston. Details here THE STATEWIDES — A plan to save downtown Springfield: 'County and city officials want to expand BOS Center and build a new hotel,' by the Illinois Times' Dean Olsen. — Illinois rental assistance program sees funding cut for 2026 budget in another blow to state, city housing programs, by the Tribune's Lizzie Kane — Springfield mayor's chief of staff is out, by the State Journal-Register's Steven Spearie CHICAGO — Local immigration advocates, politicians condemn Trump travel ban as discriminatory: 'U.S. Rep. Jesús 'Chuy' García lambasted the ban, which is set to take effect at 12:01 a.m. Monday, while accusing President Donald Trump of using the restrictions as a political diversion tactic,' by the Tribune's Angie Leventis Lourgos. — Aldermen in the Latino Caucus call for hearing into Chicago police response to ICE demonstration: The City Council's Committee on Immigrant and Refugee Rights, which Latino Caucus Chair Ald. Andre Vasquez (40th) leads, will hold a hearing 'to examine the extent of ICE's misconduct and determine whether the Chicago Police Department played any role in (Wednesday's) actions,' according to a letter, by the Tribune's Alice Yin. — Jerry Reinsdorf agrees to complex deal with the Ishbias for White Sox: 'The multistep agreement gives Reinsdorf the option to sell starting in 2029 and Justin Ishbia the option to buy him out starting in 2034,' by Front Office Sports' Margaret Fleming. — Chicago's air quality ranked among worst in the world due to Canadian wildfire smoke, by the Sun-Times' Mohammad Samra, Brett Chase and Shannon Tyler. — Green Mill building for sale in Uptown: 'It's not clear yet what may happen to the iconic jazz club that was once Al Capone's Prohibition-era hangout,' by the Sun-Times' David Struett. COOK COUNTY AND COLLARS — Harvey Ald. Colby Chapman faces felony charge, announces mayoral run before turning herself in: After announcing her bid for mayor in front of City Hall, supporters followed her to the police station where she turned herself in to face a felony aggravated battery charge stemming from a meeting that got out of hand, reports the Daily Southtown's Olivia Stevens. — 'It's a house on fire': Top Cook County prosecutor lays out plan to address domestic violence crisis, via ABC 7 — Former Wheaton chief chosen to lead Wheeling Police Department, by the Daily Herald's Russell Lissau — Residents ask Mount Prospect to fly Pride flag, but village sticks to flag policy, by the Daily Herald's Steve Zalusky Reader Digest We asked if not the Bulls, what Midwestern NBA team you're willing to root for. Janice Anderson: 'Pacers — my mom's hometown.' Brian Berg: 'Cleveland Cavaliers, Guardians, and unless they move to the suburbs, the Browns too.' Bill Finucane: 'NIU men & women's basketball.' Donna Gutman: 'Cleveland Cavs. Donovan Mitchell gets the job done.' Ron Michelotti: 'Reluctantly will be rooting for the Indiana Pacers in the finals and waiting patiently for the Bulls to return.' Kevin Morris: 'The Minnesota Timberwolves. Lived and was based in the Twin Cities for 17 glorious years!' Cristina Nonato: 'Indiana Pacers.' Joan Pederson: 'Timberwolves (My father was from Minneapolis.). College (which I prefer to the NBA): Illinois.' Donovan Pepper: 'Since I'm a Vikings fan — and have tons of family there, I'll go with the Minnesota Timberwolves!' James Scalzitti: 'Detroit gets a real bad rap from people who've never been there, but it's resilient and vibrant — and I'd have no trouble pulling for the Tigers or Red Wings. But as a longtime Bulls fan, I could never root for the Pistons. I'd just become a total Chicago Sky supporter.' NEXT QUESTION: Who's the politician you'd like to follow for a day? FROM THE DELEGATION — Sen. Tammy Duckworth, a decorated combat veteran, will speak at the Unite for Veterans rally today in Washington to address how the Trump administration has targeted the veterans in his government cuts. Duckworth says President Donald Trump has used veterans 'as political pawns to get elected then completely abandoned them once he took office,' according to a statement from her team. — Congressman Brad Schneider has joined fellow U.S. Reps. Jesús 'Chuy' García (IL-04), Danny Davis (IL-07) and Rashida Tlaib (MI-12) and other Democratic members of the Illinois delegation in sending a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. demanding answers about the decision to close all Head Start offices in Region 5. THE NATIONAL TAKE — 'Massive crack in the MAGA coalition': The Trump-Musk feud threatens the GOP's future, by POLITICO's Andrew Howard and Adam Wren — Steve Bannon on Elon Musk's big breakup: 'Told you,' by POLITICO's Rachael Bade — GOP senators question cost of Army's parade spectacle, by POLITICO's Lisa Kashinsky, Joe Gould and Paul McLeary Transitions — Charles Lee Isbell Jr. has been named University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign chancellor and U. of I. System vice president. He's now the provost at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He starts in Illinois on Aug. 1. via Crain's Brandon Dupré. — Steven Mroczkowski is now a shareholder attorney at Buchalter in Chicago, where he focuses on the litigation and construction practice groups. He was a partner at Ice Miller. TRIVIA THURSDAY's ANSWER: Congrats to Bridget Hatch for correctly answering that Illinois Gov. Henry Horner, who served from 1933 until his death in 1940, started his political career as a Cook County probate judge, serving from 1915 to 1931. TODAY's QUESTION: What's the body of water near Springfield that political folks have been known to use as the setting for rallies and fundraisers? Email skapos@ HAPPY BIRTHDAY Today: Pritzker Organization Chair and CEO Thomas Pritzker, CPS CFO Miroslava Krug, Secretary of State Digital Media Director Martin Burciaga, Chicago Theological Seminary Rev. Brian Smith, Datasite Sales Director Luke Phelan and comms strategist Sally Duros Saturday: Philanthropist Lester Crown, who turns 100, Former VP Mike Pence, Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas, Cook County Circuit Court Judge Peggy Chiampas, retired Cook County Circuit Court Judge Janet Adams Brosnahan, government consultant and lobbyist Julie Currie, Seyfarth Shaw Senior Comms Manager Claudia Banks, social media wizard Tracy Schmidt, The Support Network Executive Director Caitlin Briody, congressional staffer Chrissy Rabuse, journalist Rita Pyrillis and journalist David Mendell Sunday: State Sen. Laura Murphy, former state Sen. Tom Bennett, Senior Caseworker for Sen. Tammy Duckworth Karolina Zaczek, Secretary of State Executive Correspondence Coordinator Andrew Paisley, Peoria Convention and Visitors Bureau President JD Dalfonso, BGA policy analyst Geoffrey Cubbage, Jewish United Fund of Metropolitan Chicago Associate VP Patti Frazin, political consultant Kady McFadden, UIC Senior Associate Director and Bilingual Storyteller Carlos Sadovi, Democratic campaign manager Rachael Lund and rapper Kanye 'Ye' West And belated greetings to Zion Mayor Billy McKinney, whose birthday was Thursday. -30-
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Tesla Shares Slide as Trump-Musk Feud Erodes Investor Confidence
Tesla (TSLA, Financials) stock fell sharply on June 5 as a growing rift between President Donald Trump and CEO Elon Musk spooked investors. The stock slid 9% during the session, extending its decline to 12% since May 27, with volume reaching 100 million shares. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 5 Warning Sign with MSFT. Tesla's market value remains near $1 trillion, well above Toyota Motor's $290 billion. The stock trades at 140.21 times profit estimates. Analysts at J.P. Morgan project that eliminating the $7,500 EV subsidy could cut Tesla's annual profit by $1.2 billion and reduce regulatory credit sales by another $2 billion under separate Senate legislation. Musk, calling the bill a disgusting abomination, has urged lawmakers to vote it down. Trump responded by saying he was disappointed in Musk, who had been aligned with the administration's Department of Government Efficiency plan. The political fallout comes as Tesla sales weaken in Europe, China, and key U.S. markets, even as broader EV demand rises. The dispute adds new uncertainty around Tesla's public image and consumer base, with both Democratic and Republican buyers increasingly wary. Investors should watch for further policy developments and consumer demand shifts ahead of Tesla's next earnings release. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Sign in to access your portfolio


Fox News
an hour ago
- Fox News
Rahm Emanuel warns Dems have become party of 'punks' who 'talk down to people' and fret over identity politics
Former Democratic mayor of Chicago Rahm Emanuel argued on Wednesday the Democratic Party needs to completely overhaul its approach in order to win elections again. "The Bulwark" podcast host Tim Miller confronted Emanuel with a viral clip from an interview where the politician offered his advice to the Democratic Party shortly after the election, saying, "Here's my view. You have a Yeti cup? You fund WBEZ, NPR? Sit down, listen, and say you're sorry, and I include myself in the same mistakes," and "If you have a Yeti cup, be quiet, sit in the corner and listen. Stop talking." "I have a podcast, Rahm, you gonna make me sit in the cuck chair with my Yeti cup and stop talking?" he asked jokingly. "Yeah, I do, I say that," Emanuel later replied, after noting he has given this Yeti cup spiel about coastal elites multiple times. He then lamented that the Democrats once were a big tent party until it became college-educated intellectuals "sitting around telling everybody how to live their lives, and they were coastal, etc." "You guys have run this car straight into a wall," Emanuel said as he addressed such leaders rhetorically. "Sit down, shut up, and actually you have a moment to learn something. And stop telling people how to live their lives because you don't know squat and nobody's had the balls to tell you that, and I just did." The former Chicago mayor, who has criticized recent Democratic Party leadership multiple times, went on to suggest the key reasons why they have alienated many of their former voters. "Now to the core question, why do Democrats have a problem? Because we're punks, and we not only talk like punks, we talk down to people, we get caught up in a set of issues that aren't relevant," he said. "Think about all this about transgender in sports, etc. There's hundreds of thousands of NCAA athletes and there's 10 transgender athletes in sports in their website. This is crazy. As I said in education, we have the worst reading scores and math scores in 30 years, and we're arguing about bathrooms and locker rooms and not the classroom?" After warning Democrats against fighting over pronouns, using the term "Latinx" and calling to defund the police, he argued that their understanding of "kitchen table issues" needs to go far beyond economic concerns. The former Chicago mayor also warned that Democrats hitching their wagon to identity politics is an unpopular issue, particularly when they appear to end up losing male Black and Hispanic voters. "If you do identity, the other side gets to do identity," he warned, "and I'm going to break the news to the Democrats, the other side has more identity than you do. Just do the math."