Florida starts selling bear hunt permits despite challenge
A black bear estimated to weigh 200 pounds stands on its hind legs Thursday, July 30, 2009 and surveys a northside neighborhood in Eau Claire, Wis. The animal was discovered wandering mid-day near a city playground and a Wisconsin Department of Transportation, Division of Motor Vehicles office. (AP Photo/Eau Claire Leader-Telegram, Steve Kinderman)

Wandering Bear

Florida’s wildlife management commission on Monday started selling permits for bear hunting for the first time in two decades, despite a legal challenge to the hunt.

The permits for the hunt during the last week in October cost $100 for Florida residents and $300 for nonresidents, and they can be purchased online, in tax collector offices, or in some sporting goods stores, said Diane Eggeman, director of the state’s Division of Hunting and Game Management.

Officials with the division’s parent agency, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, say the goal of the hunt is to help manage the state’s bear population.

However, an advocacy group last week filed a lawsuit in Tallahassee, challenging the hunt. The lawsuit filed by Speak Up Wekiva contends the hunt violates an amendment to the Florida Constitution that requires the state to protect its natural resources.

Eggeman said that the commission hadn’t yet been served with the lawsuit and that there were no contingency plans for refunds should a judge rule against the hunt.

The decision to allow bear hunting “is from sound reasoning and careful consideration to the issues involved,” Eggeman said. “We’re confident that the actions will prevail.”

Florida outlawed all bear hunting in 1994. But a bear rebound, as well as an increase in the number of nuisance calls and bears killed by cars, were cited as reasons for allowing a new one-week hunt.

Hunters would be limited to one bear per person, and the killing of cubs or bears under 100 pounds would be prohibited, according to the commission’s guidelines.

Hunters would be required to register the bear at an FWC checkpoint within 12 hours of killing the animal, and there would be a limit of less than 300 bears killed.

The state’s bear population now stands at about 3,000.

Republished with permission of The Associated Press.

Associated Press



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