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Florida's Proposed Bear Hunt Pits Science Versus Emotion

Florida's Proposed Bear Hunt Pits Science Versus Emotion

Forbes01-07-2025
Florida's black bear population has risen from a few hundred animals in the 1970s to more than 4,000 ... More today.
After years of bear population increases and growing numbers of human-bear conflicts, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) voted 4-1 last May to open a limited bear hunt for the first time since 2015.
Not surprisingly, the proposed season has sparked a backlash from anti-hunting groups and underscores the ongoing debate in some states about who should manage wildlife: residents in largely urban centers with little to no background in wildlife issues or the professionals of state fish and wildlife agencies? While the answer may seem obvious, emotionally charged campaigns backing statewide referendums looking to close hunting seasons have clouded the role of some state fish and wildlife agencies.
Between 2002 and 2015, Florida bear populations expanded by 50 percent according to state assessments. At the same time, the black bear range grew from 17 percent of the state's landmass to more than half of it. Moreover, bear populations in Florida have risen from merely several hundred in the 1970s to more than 4,000 today.
With that has come a growing number of complaints from residents. In 2023 alone, FWC received some 3,000 calls regarding nuisance bears. While a hunting season may not address complaints in residential areas, it's likely to help alleviate conflicts in more rural counties of the state where hunting will impact both bear populations and behavior. It's not uncommon for bears that aren't hunted to become habituated to human activity, often lacking a general fear of man.
Officers investigate the scene where Florida's first ever fatal bear attack occurred last May.
Shortly before the May FWC vote was taken, a black bear killed 89-year-old Florida resident Robert Markel and his dog near the town of Jerome—the state's first ever black bear fatality. The FWC confirmed the attack and identified the bear, finding DNA evidence and some of Markel's remains inside the bear that was one of three animals killed by state authorities the night Markel's body was recovered. In February, another black bear attack occurred near Silver Springs, Florida, but in this instance the victim survived.
Despite the preponderance of evidence justifying a limited bear hunt—not the least of which is public safety--animal rights groups in the state have launched campaigns to disrupt the proposed hunt. One of those groups is Speak Up Wekiva, a greater Orlando-based nonprofit that was created to oppose the state's bear hunt in 2015. The group is encouraging residents to apply for as many of the 187 available bear tags as possible.
Wekiva's website features a black bear cub on its home page with the caption, 'If you love me, buy the permit that will be used to hunt me…'. Never mind that no cubs nor sows with cubs are allowed to be hunted under the proposed rules. In fact, no bears under 100 pounds can be legally taken.
Moreover, the number of tags isn't random but is based on well-established black bear population models. If the target number of bears isn't taken, the state logically will up the allotment of tags. Many states issue more tags than would likely be needed to take a target number of animals, but when the quota is hit, they simply close the season to prevent taking too many animals. Apparently, that management reality is lost on Wekiva.
To further underscore the general flaw in the Wekiva ad, the greatest threat to bear cubs comes from bruins. A male bear will often kill the cubs of other bears to induce the sow to come back into estrus, the breeding cycle. While well, grisly, it is nature's way of diversifying the gene pool to guarantee survival of the fittest and, in the end, the species itself.
A FWC researcher collects black bear hair to conduct DNA studies.
Kodiak Island, Alaska, for instance, is home to the highest density of brown bears in the world—not despite the hunting that takes place there, but because of it. Hunt a limited number of mature bruins and that guarantees the survival of more cubs. In other words, the Wekiva ad featuring the cub could more accurately say, 'If you love me, allow the hunt to continue."
The reality is that with an estimated 4,000 bears in the population, even if all tags were filled, it would not stop the growth of the state's bear population. Thus, the biggest question facing the FWC might simply be: what liability will they incur should they fail to enact the hunt at the request of the agency and more attacks on humans occur? Ultimately, wildlife commissions have a responsibility to all state citizens—not simply the most vocal.
FWC employs more than 2,000 full-time fish and wildlife experts, with many possessing advanced degrees. 'FWC has incredibly talented and experienced bear biologists and researchers, who have provided Florida with some of, if not, the best black bear data in the country,' says George Warthen, FWC Chief Conservation Officer who has been with the agency for 15 years. 'This data is at the forefront of the decisions the FWC makes in managing bear populations in the state.'
'The actions of Animal Rights groups often have less to do with what benefits wildlife than what it does to line their own pockets,' says Jack Hubbard, Executive Director of the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Environment and Welfare. 'These groups have a long history of using emotionally charged imagery and rhetoric to raise money—often with very little evidence that the funds they raise ever do much to help animals.'
Review the successes and failures of wildlife management strategies across the globe and it's difficult not to conclude that the model of hunter-funded conservation is the most viable and sustainable method that's yet to be employed. This approach came of age following the ecological calamity of the Dust Bowl of the 1930s and remains the planet's most successful conservation approach.
Ultimately, however, the question facing the FWC is simple: Follow science…or emotion?
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Casar, Doggett would run for same Austin congressional seat under GOP map, setting up clash of generations
Casar, Doggett would run for same Austin congressional seat under GOP map, setting up clash of generations

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Casar, Doggett would run for same Austin congressional seat under GOP map, setting up clash of generations

Austin Democratic Reps. Greg Casar and Lloyd Doggett are on a collision course in Texas' redrawn 37th Congressional District, setting up a potentially brutal primary between two progressives with national implications. Tensions have been building between the two since Republicans in the Texas House unveiled a new congressional map that would consolidate Democrats' two Austin-based seats into one. Both Casar and Doggett have said they would run in the sole Austin-based district left under the new GOP map. Doggett, 78, has publicly stated that he plans to continue representing Austin, which he has served in some form for over 50 years dating back to his days in the state Senate. His current district takes in about two-thirds of the city's residents, including most of West Austin, along with areas northwest and southwest of the city. Casar, 36, currently represents the 35th Congressional District, which includes East Austin and runs alongside Interstate 35 to San Antonio. Doggett has publicly and privately suggested that Casar run in the redrawn 35th District, which would be shifted to east San Antonio and a handful of solidly Republican outlying counties, covering a territory that would have voted for Donald Trump by 10 percentage points in 2024. But Casar, an Austinite who spent over six years on Austin City Council, has no plans to do so. An email from his chief of staff Stephanie Trinh, obtained by The Texas Tribune and first reported by Punchbowl News, clarified that Casar's 'focus is on fighting the maps, but whatever happens he will be running for reelection in Austin.' The proposed map has not yet been passed, thwarted thus far by state House Democrats' exodus from Texas to deny the quorum needed to conduct business. But the absentee lawmakers do not expect to hold out forever. A potential contest between Doggett and Casar would pit an Austin progressive institution against one of the party's national rising stars, unearthing brewing Democratic tensions over age and experience, forcing Austin Democrats to choose between two well-liked champions and potentially exposing fault lines in a changing city. In interviews with over a dozen Austin Democrats, leaders lamented the potential for a primary but had differing opinions on Doggett's early maneuvering, who would be favored and how each congressman should proceed. Doggett has stung first, both publicly and privately. In a save-the-date invitation to donors, first obtained by Punchbowl News, Doggett laid out his case for continuing to represent the seat and said he hoped Casar, who is Latino, runs in the new 35th Congressional District, a majority-Hispanic seat. Casar, he noted in the donor appeal, could use his organizing skills to win over 'disaffected Hispanic voters.' 'Our best opportunity of holding CD 35 is for [Casar] to stay in it and fight Trump, though I know that is a difficult challenge for him,' Doggett said in an interview with The Texas Tribune. 'Coming over into a district that he represents very little of now is only going to lead to the kind of intra-party division that the Trump people always like to encourage.' As drawn, the new 37th Congressional District includes about two-thirds of Doggett's current constituents. The rest of the new 37th would come from Casar's current district, pulling in his Austin political base — including the City Council seat he represented for over six years. The new 35th District, meanwhile, contains less than 10 percent of Casar's constituents. 'Other than the fact that Republicans arbitrarily assigned this seat the same number as Greg's current one, there's no reason it would make sense for Greg to run in that district,' Trinh wrote in the email to supporters, while noting that nearly 250,000 of Casar's current constituents would be in the new 37th District. [Draft Texas congressional map pits Democratic incumbents against each other, spelling possible primary clashes] Trinh also said Doggett emailed donors without giving Casar or his team a heads-up that he planned to suggest Casar run in the 35th District. The two Democrats both attended a funeral for former Austin City Council member Bill Spelman Sunday morning, the same day Doggett's email went out. Doggett said the two did not have an opportunity to talk during the service. He added that Casar had sent fundraising messages before Sunday 'to many of my contributors without mentioning in which district he was running.' Doggett said he did not feel that Casar needed to clear those messages with him, and so he 'certainly saw no need to clear my unsurprising message to my supporters with him.' Publicly, Casar has brushed off the potential primary confrontation, sticking to talk of fighting the map and rallying with angry Austinites. In an email his team sent to donors inviting them to a Monday fundraiser in Austin, neither Doggett nor the prospective primary was mentioned. 'Greg wanted to invite you to join him in Austin for an event in support of his re-election campaign,' the email reads. 'We hope you can join us to hear important updates about how Trump and Texas Republicans are working to dismantle our representation in the state.' Democrats are also bracing for the prospect of an expensive fight that could direct millions of dollars toward the internecine clash that would otherwise be deployed against Republicans in November. Doggett is sitting on a war chest of $6.2 million, accumulated over years from his safe seat. And Casar, the chairman of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, has access to a national donor network; with 101 members, the CPC is one of the largest caucuses in the House and includes some of the Democratic Party's best fundraisers. Doggett's early public moves have forced Democrats to begin considering a primary they want to avoid — especially while they are trying to mobilize public opinion against the unpassed maps. 'I will in no way contemplate a fight between Casar and Doggett,' Austin state Rep. Gina Hinojosa, who did not weigh in on the potential primary, said in an interview from Illinois last week. 'The maps are not done. The fight is just beginning. My mind is not there.' Doggett unleashed First elected to Congress in 1994, Doggett has already survived a handful of GOP redistricting rounds that forced him to move districts — including in the last mid-decade redraw of 2003, when Republicans carved up Austin and pushed Doggett to run for a newly drawn seat that ran from southern Travis County to the U.S.-Mexico border. The latest map would mark the fourth time the GOP-controlled Legislature has revamped district lines in a way that jeopardized Doggett's tenure in office, perhaps explaining his willingness to speak out while most other Austin Democrats refuse to publicly acknowledge that the maps are likely bound to pass. 'Our odds are not as good as I would like them to be,' Doggett said of the effort to derail the GOP map. 'It doesn't mean we don't fight to the finish, but I need to be prepared if we don't achieve the outcome that we want.' But it's precisely that attitude — laid bare in his email missive to donors — that has upset some Austin Democrats. 'Right now, what Texas Democrats should be talking about is how to support our Texas House Democrats who have broken quorum and fight like hell to keep these maps from passing,' former Democratic state Sen. Wendy Davis said. 'That's what I think left a bad taste in people's perception [Tuesday] when they received this email from Congressman Doggett. It was as though he'd already moved on to accepting that these new maps were reality.' A Democratic operative in Austin said the episode is emblematic of voters' broader frustrations with the Democratic Party. 'I wish both of them — and I wish Lloyd in particular — would use this sort of energy in fighting the Trump administration and fighting these maps,' the operative said. 'It just seems to me like he is rolling over and accepting it.' Most elected officials in Austin are keeping their powder dry, saying they are focused on supporting the quorum break and building public momentum against the proposed map. But Austin Democrats' silence is not ignorance. 'People really want the Democrats to stay focused and not make this into a fight before it even needs to happen,' said Monique Alcala, former executive director of the Texas Democratic Party. 'A lot of folks, and particularly the leaders of color that I've talked to, they're just completely frustrated with the fact that Lloyd is just trying to get out in front on this.' Some Austin Democrats said they understood where Doggett was coming from. 'I think what's being shown is a frustration that Austin's being sliced and diced in these maps,' said Austin state Rep. John Bucy. 'They're trying to silence our voices. We have two effective congressmen.' Doggett, for his part, said he knows that most local Democrats want to avoid having to choose between two members of Congress they like and have known for years. Still, he said Casar has made calls to Austinites about potential endorsements, underscoring the need for him to be up front about his own plan to run in the 37th District. 'I'm not ready to start listing endorsements,' Doggett said. 'Some folks have said, 'You can count on me, but I would appreciate your holding it until we're sure this is going to happen.'' Carlos Lopez, a Travis County Constable and former chair of the Austin Tejano Democrats, counts himself as one of those supporters. While he said he respects both Doggett and Casar, Doggett's institutional knowledge and long career of public service in Austin matter to him. 'I hate to see there being some sort of split or division, but Doggett belongs to Austin and Austin belongs to Doggett,' Lopez said, adding that he agreed with Doggett's case that Casar could win the newly drawn San Antonio seat. Mike Siegel, a progressive Austin City Council member, said he respects both Casar and Doggett and does not relish having to make a decision. But he said Texas Democrats are in a decades-long struggle for political change — and if Austin can only have one Democratic voice in Congress, it should belong to Casar, who has the career runway and vision to offer progressive leadership, in Texas and beyond, for decades to come. 'Greg Casar represents hope in the long-term struggle and projecting our voice outwards,' Siegel said. 'Not just representing our district, but fighting to win other districts, and setting an example for the type of leadership we need.' Davis agreed, saying she would hate to see Casar's bright future cut short. Best known nationally for being the first Democrat to call on Joe Biden to drop out of the presidential race last summer, Doggett said he thinks his own seniority is an asset to Austin. In his call for Biden to step down, Doggett said the then-president should 'encourage a new generation of leaders' — an irony some Austin Democrats have noted. Doggett has said his thinking on Biden was related to ability, not age. Tenure is the coin of the realm in Congress, where the most powerful committee posts go to members who have been there the longest. Doggett is the second-most senior Democrat on the Ways and Means Committee — the influential tax-writing panel — and the ranking member on its Health subcommittee. If Democrats win the House in 2026, Doggett would likely chair the subcommittee, which oversees policy dealing with health insurance and health care costs. 'When I talk about the importance of that seniority, it is in terms of being able to have a say on the vast majority of decisions that affect folks here in Austin, in their pocketbooks particularly,' Doggett said. The longtime Austin Democrat also said his push for Casar to run in the 35th District is about Democrats holding onto as many seats as possible. He noted that his email to supporters did not contain "the slightest criticism of Greg." 'I'm just hoping that [Casar] will ultimately decide that the fight against Trump is the most important fight, and that he will help us win that district,' Doggett said. 'I will join with enthusiasm, supporting him in that effort.' Democrats agree that they want strong candidates in each seat, but disagree about who should run in each. One Austin Democrat, granted anonymity to speak candidly, said Austinites remain enthusiastic about Doggett's long record and agreed that Casar would have the best chance to win the San Antonio seat. But another local Democrat suggested Doggett should be the one to run in the 35th District. Republicans may have drawn the battlefield, but it would be advantageous for Doggett, a well-funded Democrat with high name recognition, to close his career battling a Republican and making way for a younger member like Casar, the Democrat said. What Doggett is asking of Casar could be career-ending for a young progressive with a national profile. The newly drawn 35th Congressional District not only voted for Trump; even in the strong Democratic year of 2018, Sen. Ted Cruz would have narrowly carried it had it existed then. 'Greg leaving Austin to run in this new south Texas seat would deprive Austin of Greg's voice and growing influence as new chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, and it would undercut Democrats' chance to win in the new south Texas seat by running a candidate with deep ties to that community,' Trinh, Casar's chief of staff, wrote in her email to supporters. Unpacking the race If it comes to a primary, Doggett's model of decades-long retail politicking could be pitted against Casar's background in labor organizing and city government. In interviews with more than a dozen politicos in Austin, Democrats said that both Doggett and Casar have attentively maintained relationships across local politics. Doggett has not faced a competitive race in years. But he has a large war chest and a long history of delivering constituent services. '[Doggett's] got a bit of Jake Pickle in him,' said Bill Aleshire, a former Democratic Travis County judge who now considers himself an independent. 'I think he kind of likes campaigning. You make him campaign, shit, he'll just go campaign.' Multiple Democratic operatives said Casar, given his national profile, should be able to raise significant funds if needed. He would start the race at a financial disadvantage to Doggett, with just over $450,000 in his campaign account at last count. Numerous Democrats lamented that such a battle was happening at all. Doggett, one statewide Democratic operative noted, is still 'razor sharp' and has been a fixture on the Travis County ballot for decades, while Casar is 'one of the most talented, capable voices' in the state. 'I think a lot of hearts will be with Casar and a lot of money would be on Doggett,' the operative said. For the local elected officials and Democratic groups who have relationships with both, it could get awkward quickly — and detract from their decades-long mission of electing a Democrat statewide, particularly in next year's U.S. Senate race. But four Democrats active in Austin politics pointed out that attention may be the deciding factor. Turnout in Casar's old north-central Austin City Council district was typically lower than that of other districts — meaning he would need to turn out lower-propensity voters to win. 'I do think Lloyd has to want low turnout,' the Democratic operative said. 'And Greg's going to have to push his younger, more diverse voters out at a higher rate. That's going to be difficult.' A primary between the two could also be a microcosm of divides between whiter, wealthier West Austin and younger, working-class East Austin. Those cleavages were laid bare in the city's 2022 mayoral race. Younger voters, especially the large population of transplants, could determine the outcome. Austin experienced rapid growth during the pandemic; many newer Austinites are younger and less familiar with Doggett's longstanding presence. 'The largest electorate we have [in Travis County] is between the ages of 18 to 35,' one Democratic activist said. 'That could make or break a race, depending on how outreach is done, but I think Greg is in a better position to reach out to younger voters.' But Doggett thinks he can capture young voters as well. Though it has been a long time since he has faced a competitive campaign, numerous Austin Democrats said he has a proven model of retail politicking and previously represented some East Austin voters who would be folded into the new 37th District. And Doggett noted he has knocked doors for Democrats around the city over the years — including a familiar one. 'I believe in engaging young people,' he said. 'That's one of the reasons I went out and campaigned in the rain, block-to-block, for a young Greg Casar when he first ran for the City Council.' More all-star speakers confirmed for The Texas Tribune Festival, Nov. 13–15! This year's lineup just got even more exciting with the addition of State Rep. Caroline Fairly, R-Amarillo; former United States Attorney General Eric Holder; Abby Phillip, anchor of 'CNN NewsNight'; Aaron Reitz, 2026 Republican candidate for Texas Attorney General; and State Rep. James Talarico, D-Austin. Get your tickets today! 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Austin gun shop owner body-slams man on South Congress, claims self-defense
Austin gun shop owner body-slams man on South Congress, claims self-defense

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Austin gun shop owner body-slams man on South Congress, claims self-defense

The Brief Austin gun shop owner body-slammed a man, claiming self-defense He was caught on camera after leaving a restaurant on South Congress AUSTIN, Texas - An Austin gun shop owner is claiming self-defense after body-slamming a man on South Congress. The man was caught on camera and spoke about what happened. What happened? The backstory Central Texas Gun Works Owner Michael Cargill has been going to Habana Restaurant in Austin for years, but his most recent visit took a violent turn. "I kind of turned and looked at him," Cargill said. "I guess the way I looked at him – he didn't like that." Cargill claims a man in the restaurant parking lot threatened him with a large knife. "He said he was going to flatten my tires, and I'm like, no you're not going to flatten tires," Cargill said. "He said well, I'm going to stab you instead." Cargill says he always carries a firearm but wanted to deescalate the situation by disarming the man and getting him away from the business. Moments later, Cargill body slammed the individual on South Congress Avenue, a moment he says he didn't realize was captured by another person outside the restaurant. Cargill says Austin police arrived shortly after, but the man had already left the scene. "If someone is trying to kill me, I have the right to protect myself and stop that immediate threat," Cargill said. Dig deeper Texas-based attorney Jeremy Rosenthal spoke to FOX 7 after watching the video Cargill posted to his social media. "By body slamming him, by assaulting him, I think he was well within his rights, assuming that's what happened," Rosenthal said. Cargill claims he told Austin police what happened, which led officers to go looking for the individual with no success and a report was ultimately not filed. "If they can't find them, they're going to move on to the next call," Cargill said. Despite the lack of a report, Rosenthal believes legal action could still be pursued by law enforcement. "You would think the state would be interested," Rosenthal said. "If there's a guy running around with a knife threatening random people, that's pretty scary." FOX 7 also asked Rosenthal if self-defense would still be in play if the man seen in the video was in fact retreating from Cargill. "It's all sort of happening at the same time and if there's a clear break in action to put it into movie terms, then yes, once the encounter is over, then you would think that would have a big legal impact here," Rosenthal said. "It's not clear that's what was happening." The Source Information from interviews conducted by FOX 7 Austin's Alec Nolan Solve the daily Crossword

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