Nebraska Senator Introduces Bill to Trophy Hunt Lions
Last month, one of Nebraska's rare mountain lions had to be euthanized after sustaining severe injuries from being caught in a steel-jawed leg hold trap. She was one of only a handful of female lions believed to live in the state. In a population of just twenty cats, breeding-aged females play a crucial role. Residents saw this loss as a huge setback in the species' recovery, with many wanting a statewide ban on the traps and an increase in protection laws for mountain lions. State Senator LeRoy Louden, however, has continued his push to kill off the cats.
In 2010 Senator Louden introduced a bill to reclassify mountain lions as "predators" (on the same list as opossums, coyotes, and skunks, among other "unwanted animals") and to allow ranchers to freely kill mountain lions on their property without needing permits or having to contact the game agency first (more). It passed. Now, Senator Louden is taking it one step further with Legislative Bill 928. If passed, LB 928 would allow the Nebraska Game & Parks Commission to open an annual trophy hunting season on mountain lions.
The public and even some Game & Parks employees are shaking their heads, saying it's far too soon to think about allowing the public to kill the cats for fun. There are only twenty lions after all, and less than 5% of Nebraska residents are hunters--with just a fraction of those interested in hunting a big game species.
There is a massive pile of actual important issues the Senator should be focusing on such as job creation which, along with child welfare reform, are stated on his website as being the "top priorities in this year's session." By instead trying to push a bill that would promote the extermination of a species (and one that should currently be listed as state-endangered) Senator Louden is not only wasting time and resources, but he is showing a blatant disregard for the views of the people he was elected to represent. But then again, perhaps he is looking out for the public welfare... he felt it was necessary to write into law that a lion hunting tag shall not exceed $25. My, how nice of him!
If you are also outraged by LB 928, please take a moment to share your thoughts with the Nebraska Legislature. Remind them that this bill is unnecessary and that the majority of residents do not want Nebraska's lions hunted for sport.
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