PENINSULA POLL BACKGROUNDER: Bill aims to make cougar-hunting with dogs permanent

OLYMPIA — Fifteen years after voters statewide banned using dogs to hunt cougars, lawmakers want to set permanent hunting seasons allowing licensed hunters to use hounds to track the cats.

The proposed bill, sponsored by Rep. Brian Blake, D-Aberdeen, is the latest step in a seven-year process of chipping away at the 1996 ban through a pilot program aimed at testing cougar-hunting seasons with dogs.

The original three-year program has been extended twice so far.

Representatives from the Fish and Wildlife Commission said the pilot program has resulted in a 75 percent decline in confirmed complaints about cougars killing pets or livestock or causing other problems.

Still, opponents of the bill said the use of hounds is cruel and inhumane and is not being limited to public safety concerns.

“Essentially, we’re concerned that this is going to allow sport hunters to use this as an excuse” for using dogs, said Jennifer Hillman, western regional director of the Humane Society of the United States.

The Fish and Wildlife Commission established the pilot program in 2004 and extended it through 2011 to protect public safety and manage cougar populations in six affected counties, all in or near the Cascades.

The bill would essentially make it permanent by letting the commission determine cougar hunting seasons, set quotas on cougar kills and decide who is permitted to hunt cougars, be it licensed hunters, state agents or contracted hunters.

Statewide Initiative 655 passed in 1996, prohibiting the use of dogs in cougar hunting but allowing exemptions for public safety and livestock depredation incidents.

“We want to make sure that the integrity of what the initiative proposed — and what was passed — is maintained,” Hillman said.

HillmanSSRqs concerns about sport hunting involve companies that offer guided cougar hunts at a cost. The commerce attached to it, she said, shows that cougar hunting is used for more than just public safety.

Representatives from Fish and Wildlife, however, say they use hounds to exert better control aimed at creating healthy, stable cougar populations.

Donny Martorello, a section manager for the agency, said hunters are most likely to take young female cougars due to population demographics. Such uneven pressure on females is risky for population management, he said.

Dogs tree cougars and give hunters time to identify the sex and age of the cats.

Because Fish and Wildlife sets seasonal quotas on how many female and male cougars can be killed, the use of hounds helps balance the harvests, Martorello said.

Chelan, Okanogan, Ferry, Stevens, and Pend Oreille counties were included in the original pilot program.

In the extension, Klickitat County requested to opt-in as well.

Blake’s current bill would allow for similar opt-in requests when cougar populations exceed a communitySSRqs tolerance.

Hillman said the Humane Society advocates using dogs in a nonlethal way, to teach cougars what areas to avoid, because “we live in a state where cougars are indigenous, where cougars exist with humans.”

Rep. Hans Dunshee, D-Snohomish, has proposed an amendment to the bill that would only allow for another three-year extension of the pilot program, rather than make it permanent.

With the passage of I-655, “the people clearly said we donSSRqt want dogs used to run down creatures. ItSSRqs always good to check back in,” he said.

Blake said his main objective is to restore population management tools to wildlife professionals. Using dogs will also help teach cougars to stay away from urban areas.

“I think I would rather save lives ahead of time and use this program to manage the population and teach cougars that humans and dogs are something they donSSRqt want to be around,” he said.

Pilot program cougar harvests averaged 42 cats a year, far below the average number of cougars killed in the regular season as game animals.

Cougar kills in livestock and pet depredation circumstances also factor into total harvest, which has been about 200 cats annually since the program began.

More in News

UPDATE: US Highway 101 reopens at Lake Crescent

A section of U.S. Highway 101 at Lake Crescent… Continue reading

Library crew members Judith Bows, left, and Suzy Elbow marvel at the Uptown Gingerbread Contest entries at the Port Townsend Library. (Diane Urbani de la Paz/for Peninsula Daily News)
Gingerbread house construction under way at libraries

Categories include Most Creative, Most Literary

Hurricane Ridge could get $80M for new day lodge

Package included in disaster aid

Port Townsend to provide services to homeless encampment

City approves portable bathrooms, dumpsters

One injured in two-car collision at Eaglemount Road

A Port Townsend man was transported to Jefferson Healthcare… Continue reading

Lazy J Tree Farm owner Steve Johnson has lived his whole life on the farm and says he likes to tell people, “I have the same telephone number I was born with.” In the distance, people unload yard waste to be chopped into mulch or turned into compost. Christmas trees are received free of charge, regardless of where they were purchased. (Emily Matthiessen/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Christmas traditions continue at Lazy J Tree Farm

Customers track down trees and holiday accessories

Jefferson County forms Transportation Benefit District

Funding would help road maintenance

Clallam County Sheriff’s Office Chief Criminal Deputy Amy Bundy shops with a child during the Shop with a Hero event on Dec. 7. (Jesse Major)
Shop with a Hero spreads Christmas joy

About 150 children experience event with many first responders

Portion of Olympic Discovery Trail closed this week

The city of Port Angeles has closed a portion… Continue reading

Blue Christmas service set for Thursday

There will be a Blue Christmas service at 4… Continue reading

Toys for Sequim Kids, seen in 2023, offers families in the Sequim School District free gifts for children ages 1-18 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday at the Sequim Prairie Grange. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group file)
Toys for Sequim Kids event set for today

Annual event helps hundreds of children receive gifts

Committee members sought for February ballot measures

The auditors in Clallam and Jefferson counties are seeking volunteers to serve… Continue reading