| West
Yellowstone, MT- Shortly after noon today,
the Montana Department of Livestock (DOL) attempted
to haze a bull buffalo from the south side of the Madison
River. Three DOL agents on snowmobiles, accompanied
by an officer from the Gallatin County Sheriff's department,
participated in the operation.
During
this operation in Gallatin National Forest, Buffalo
Field Campaign volunteer Andrea Rightsell was assaulted
by a DOL agent as she approached to ask a question.
Rightsell was standing in front of the agent when he
ran into her with his snowmobile, knocking her to the
ground. She intends to press charges.
The object of the DOL's hazing operation was a lone
bull who has been out of the park less than a week,
on National Forest land designated as wildlife habitat.
It is unclear whether the DOL intended to capture the
buffalo or haze him back to the park. Hazing buffalo
causes them unnecessary stress and taxes the crucial
energy reserves they need to survive the winter. The
bull was forced to run through snow deep enough that
the DOL's snowmobiles became stuck repeatedly.
Montana
has recently come under fire from federal agencies for
its mismanagement of the Yellowstone herd. Although
there has never been a documented case of brucellosis
transmission from wild buffalo to livestock, the state
maintains a zero-tolerance policy for buffalo migrating
from the park. The state insists such measures are necessary
to preserve the brucellosis-free status of Montana's
cattle.
The
state's position is neither supported by science nor
endorsed by the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
(APHIS), the federal body responsible for maintaining
the state's brucellosis-free status. "We don't feel
there's a need to kill every bison that comes out of
the park," said APHIS spokesperson Patrick Collins.
Because bulls cannot transmit the disease, APHIS considers
them "low risk" and says their presence in the state
will not jeopardize Montana's brucellosis-free status.
Of
the ninety buffalo shipped to slaughter last winter,
forty-two were bulls. These animals were killed in the
name of protecting cattle, who do not even return to
the area until June 15.
"The
DOL is totally unqualified to be managing the buffalo,
as today's events clearly show. We can't afford to entrust
our last free herd of buffalo to an agency that doesn't
seem to know or care how to protect them," said Emily
Kodama, a volunteer with the Buffalo Field Campaign.
Video footage and still photos available upon request
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