08-10-22 issue

Page 20

Clean up event to issue prizes

Elk management group passes recommendations on to FWP Part of three-pronged effort at improving elk management in Montana News from MT Fish, Wildlife & Parks

HELENA – After 10 meetings and much deliberation, the Elk Management Citizen Advisory Group has forwarded its recommendations to Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks Director Hank Worsech. “I’m very impressed with the work that went into these recommendations,” Worsech said. “I asked the members to bring their own experience and creativity to help us advance potential solutions to issues facing elk management in Montana. Their recommendations are innovative, heartfelt and collaborative – all I could hope for.” The citizen advisory group was formed this past spring after a call for applications. Nearly 300 20 - August 10, 2022

people applied. Twelve members from across the state were appointed by Director Worsech and met for the first time on March 22. The remaining applicants served as a sounding board for advisory group members and provided feedback on the group’s work. Now officially in the department’s hands, the recommendations will be assessed by staff for implementation feasibility, fiscal impacts and legal or other issues before all being released for public comment. Once the public has a chance to provide feedback on the recommendations and staff assessments, Worsech plans to present them to the Environmental Quality Council, an interim legislative committee. The advisory group is one of three pieces of a larger effort aimed at improving elk management in Montana. The group was specifically tasked with developing a set of recommendations to address elk management issues and improve

relationships between hunters and landowners. The second piece of the process is the Private Lands/Public Wildlife (PLPW) committee, which is currently working on suggestions for the Elk Hunting Access Agreements Program, hunter ethics and education, and public access programs. The third piece is the ongoing process of scoping for management objectives for the elk plan revision. Currently, FWP is collecting public feedback on what management objectives should be in hunting districts across Montana to inform the upcoming revision to the elk management plan. The three separate looks at elk management in Montana will provide a variety of perspectives that will be critical moving forward. “I wanted to get these efforts underway simultaneously because elk management in Montana presents such complex social and biological issues,” Worsech said. “Any

similar solutions and ideas from these different efforts will tell me what elements have broader support. Each piece of the process will also raise unique ideas for improving elk management moving forward. That’s exactly the kind of comprehensive approach we need on the complicated task of managing elk in Montana.” The Elk Management Citizen Advisory Group’s recommendations and staff assessments will come out for public comment in August. The next PLPW meeting is Aug. 24. The elk plan scoping meetings are ongoing with the plan slated to be out for public comment in spring of 2023 and finalized later that summer. “I’ve insisted since becoming director at FWP that we needed to improve elk management both for hunters and for landowners. We’ve asked the public, and these groups in particular, for help and they’ve stepped forward in a big way,” Worsech said.

Valley Journal

FLATHEAD WATERSHED AREAS — The Flathead Basin Commission, the Flathead Conservation District, the Flathead Rivers Alliance, the Flathead Lakers, and the Lake County Conservation District are co-hosting a cleanup event in the Flathead Watershed. The 2022 Flathead Waters Cleanup Event is a volunteer event to clean up trash in and around the waterbodies in the basin, including both Flathead and Lake Counties. Individuals or teams of volunteers will sign up to collect trash and clean up any section of river, lake, creek, or pond. When they register, volunteers can select the area of interest to clean up through an interactive mapping feature on the event website. This will enable organizers to ensure that there is no replication and to track where cleanup efforts are taking place. The event will take place on Saturday,

Aug.13 from 9 a.m.– 3 p.m., with a celebratory afterparty and prize giveaway hosted at Sacred Waters Brewing from 4-8 p.m. The first 40 volunteers to fill out the registration survey will receive a meal voucher to be used at Sacred Eats during the afterparty. Prizes from our sponsors include: a half-day guided fly fishing trip, an evening sailing cruise, half-day rafting trips, camping gear, fly fishing gear, and tons of swag. Prizes will be given to the volunteers that collect the most trash, find the most unique item(s), or submit the best photo. To be eligible for prizes, all volunteers must register prior to the event by visiting the event website, or by contacting Emilie Henry by phone at 406-4616831 or email at: emilie. henry@mt.gov. Link to website: https://qrgo. page.link/A6gLX Link to Facebook event: https:// fb.me/e/3wq5t6U8h

Lake County Marriages/Divorces for July Marriages Hallie Jo Sohr & Maverick W. Nelson Donovan Scott Pugh & Kristy Kay Jarrett Am&a Jane Billingsley & William Elias Powell James Joseph Strosahi & Tami Sue Usher Jacie Morrison & Logan Nutzman Caleigh Brianne McCabe & Austin Matthew DeSilva James Neal Darlington & Elize Reinecke &rew Mark Drinnan & Megan V. Torgerson Kodi Kristine Woods & Caleb C. Chavez &rew Jude Hovan & Deilyn Johanna Graham Ashley Theresa Merwin & Joshua James Gallant John M. Mueli & Elisabeth R. Dunn Jerry Wayne Markus & Daphne Elizabeth Lubin Jacqueline Jae Wells & Vincent Paumier Cusma Keenan David Allison & Nianna Joimarcile Light Jared A. Halvorson & Emma Marie Didier Divorces Tanner B. Wardall & Samantha M. Wardall (Dodson restored)


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