Yellowstone's grizzlies need your help!

Read a message by Susan & Jeff BridgesWhen the grizzly bear was listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act three decades ago, the bear was teetering on the edge of extinction. The Act’s protections have set the bears on the road to recovery -- but there is still a long way to go.

A recent government proposal would prematurely remove protections for grizzly bears in and around Yellowstone National Park, before the bears are ready to survive without them. Kicking grizzlies off the Endangered Species list would allow the majestic bears to be hunted and their habitat to be destroyed.

Please, help us tell the Fish and Wildlife Service not to de-list grizzly bears until their habitat is protected and their long-term survival is secure!

Personalized messages are the most compelling -- why are you committed to protecting Yellowstone's grizzlies?

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Sample Letter for Campaign

Subject: Yellowstone's grizzlies not ready for de-listing

Dear [ Decision Maker ] ,

I would like to submit my comment in opposition to removing the Yellowstone grizzly bear population from the list of species protected by the Endangered Species Act.

This proposal would prematurely remove protections for this grizzly population, before the bears are ready to survive without them. I am especially concerned that kicking grizzlies off the Endangered Species List would allow the majestic bears to be hunted, open grizzly habitat to large-scale real estate, logging, and energy development, and increase the likelihood of bear-human conflict.

Independent scientists have repeatedly cautioned that if we want to maintain a healthy national grizzly bear population over the long term, then delisting the Yellowstone grizzlies would be the wrong thing to do. Prematurely removing the species from the endangered species list for political reasons would undermine the bears' chances of fully recovering across the country. Instead of delisting bears, we need to protect additional habitat and connect Yellowstone to other grizzly populations.

I urge the service not to de-list grizzly bears until permanent protections are in place for their habitat and their long-term survival is secure. Yellowstone's grizzlies need legal safeguards and habitat protections now, more than ever.

Sincerely,

Campaign Launched:
January 17, 2006



Background Information

 
A Message from Susan & Jeff Bridges

Dear friend,

If the Statue of Liberty is our monument to American opportunity, Yellowstone National Park, with its grizzly bears, wolves, and free-roaming buffalo, is our monument to American wilderness.  Yellowstone grizzly bears, in particular, stand for something rugged and grand in the American landscape and in the American character it shaped. Unfortunately, the grizzly's image is faring better than the bear itself. 

Interior Secretary Gale Norton is now proposing to withdraw federal Endangered Species Act protections that currently protect Yellowstone's small grizzly population from hunting and habitat destruction.  Please join us in helping to prevent the Bush Administration from squandering our national investment in recovering Yellowstone grizzly bears. 

Yellowstone's grizzly population of only 500-600 bears is too small to survive legalized hunting and too land-starved to withstand oil and gas drilling, mining, logging, road-building, and residential development in the last remaining habitat outside of Yellowstone Park's boundaries.

While many of us would like to think of Yellowstone as a safe refuge for wildlife, the Park alone is much too small to support a healthy population of grizzly bears.  As it stands now, Yellowstone grizzlies are "fenced in" by highways, power lines, gas wells, ranchettes, trophy houses, golf courses, and growing mountain towns.  Without effective legal checks, development will erode away much of the small "island" where Yellowstone grizzlies now survive. Yet, the Bush Administration is proposing to remove all effective protections for grizzly habitat.

To make matters worse, the major food sources that support Yellowstone grizzly bears are declining. For example, grizzly bears depend on whitebark pine nuts to carry them through winter hibernation, but whitebark pines are dying at alarming rates due to a foreign disease and a massive mountain pine beetle epidemic. Yellowstone's buffalo, another key bear food source, are currently being slaughtered in droves just outside Yellowstone Park boundaries. With these ongoing attacks on the Yellowstone grizzly's essential food supply, this is no time to take grizzly bears off the Endangered Species list

The grizzly bear is an "umbrella" species. The health of the grizzly population indicates the health of plants and animals that are struggling to survive in their ever-shrinking natural environment.

Won't you please write to Secretary Norton and let her know that now is the time to stand up for Yellowstone's magnificent wildlife, not aid their destruction?

Write your Representatives and ask them to resist efforts to weaken the Endangered Species Act.  Write a letter to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service stating your concerns. With your help we can keep some of it wild!

Thank you!

Susan and Jeff Bridges

 


 

Take action today!

Visit the Earthjustice web site for more detail on the grizzly de-listing proposal & it's harmful effects.

The proposal to lift grizzly protections opened a comment period during which the public is invited to submit formal comments. The comment period has been extended until March 20, 2006, so you still have time to get involved. Please, take action today and tell the government not to de-list grizzly bears until permanent protections are in place for their habitat and their long-term survival is secure.

If you wish to send your comments by mail, please send to:

Grizzly Bear Recovery Coordinator
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
University Hall 309
University of Montana
Missoula, Montana 59812