Zebra skinned; principal reassigned over email; dad, toddler swept out to sea
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Odd and interesting news from around the West.
- By KEITH RIDLER Associated Press
- Updated
BOISE, Idaho (AP) — A change in U.S. House rules making it easier to transfer millions of acres of federal public lands to states is worrying hunters and other outdoor enthusiasts across the West who fear losing access.
Lawmakers earlier this month passed a rule eliminating a significant budget hurdle and written so broadly that it includes national parks.
President-elect Donald Trump's pick for Interior secretary, Montana Rep. Ryan Zinke, voted for the rule change as did many other Republicans. The Senate would have to weigh in on public land transfers as well.
"Anybody who uses them for any kind of outdoor activity — snowmobiling, mountain biking, hunters, all that — they're very alarmed by all this," said Boise State University professor and public lands policy expert John Freemuth. "The loss of access that this could lead to."
The rule passed by the House defines federal land that could be given to states as "any land owned by the United States, including the surface estate, the subsurface estate, or any improvements thereon."
About a million square miles of public land is managed by the federal government, mostly in 12 Western states, according to the Congressional Research Service. Some state lawmakers in recent years have made failed efforts to wrest control of those lands, mainly to reduce obstacles to accessing resources such as timber, natural gas and oil, Freemuth noted.
U.S. lawmakers have the authority to transfer those lands to states. Outdoor recreationists fear states would then sell the land to private entities that would end public access.
Zinke, whose confirmation hearing to become Interior secretary is Tuesday, has a track record of opposing public land transfers. Last summer, he resigned as a delegate to the Republican National Convention, which favors such transfers.
"The congressman has never voted to sell or transfer federal lands and he maintains his position against the sale or transfer of federal lands," Heather Swift, a Zinke spokeswoman, said in an email.
Whit Fosburgh, CEO of the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership, which works to guarantee places to hunt and fish, said he's inclined to excuse Zinke on his House vote favoring transfers because of his record being "very solid on these public lands issues."
Still, Fosburgh was irked that the House approved a rule that he said essentially allows federal public land to be given away as if it had no value.
Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, also voted for the rule easing transfers. But Simpson was also the driver of a 2015 bill that created three wilderness areas in Idaho after he got ranchers, recreationists and environmental groups to back the plan after a 15-year effort.
The possibility that President Barack Obama would designate a much larger area as a national monument is widely believed to have led to the bill passed by the House and Senate.
"There is no disputing Congressman Simpson is a supporter of public lands," Nikki Wallace, a spokeswoman for Simpson, said in an email.
Freemuth noted that even with a rule change, land transfers would face significant challenges.
"Whatever Zinke says early will affect those attempts," Freemuth said.
He and Fosburgh fear that federal land turned over to states would be too expensive to manage, particularly when it comes to fighting wildfires.
Freemuth believes states would sell land to private entities. Fosburgh was equally dismissive, saying transfers would eventually lead to private owners and no public access.
"You get rid of public lands, you end hunting and fishing in this country as we know it today," Fosburgh said.
- Updated
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — New Mexico officials say its high school graduation rate climbed to an all-time high of 71 percent last year.
New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez announced the increase in the graduation rate Monday as she pushes for legislative reforms to crack down on truancy and retain more students in third grade if they can't meet literacy requirements.
The rate is up from 68.6 percent in 2015, and about 63 percent in 2011 just after Martinez took office.
The Public Education Department says graduation rates increased at 48 out of 89 school districts in 2016, including districts in Albuquerque, Las Cruces, Gadsden, Santa Fe, Ruidoso, Taos and Carlsbad.
Nationwide, the high school graduation rate was 83 percent in 2015.
- Updated
BRECKENRIDGE, Colo. (AP) — Authorities say a skier died after hitting a tree at Breckenridge Ski Resort last week.
The Summit Daily News (http://bit.ly/2jiaWbH ) reports that 47-year-old Sean Haberthier of Denver was reported missing Thursday evening and was found unresponsive by searchers Friday morning. Summit County coroner Regan Wood says he wasn't wearing a helmet and died of a severe skull fracture.
Breckenridge vice president John Buhler issued a statement expressing the resort's sympathy for his family and friends.
It's the third ski-related death in Colorado this ski season. Last month, 48-year-old Kevin Pitts of Longmont died after hitting a tree at Breckenridge and 40-year-old Kelly Huber of San Antonio, Texas died after falling from a lift that malfunctioned at Ski Granby Ranch.
Nine people died while skiing or snowboarding in the state last season.
___
Information from: Summit Daily News, http://www.summitdaily.com/
- Updated
SEATTLE (AP) — The family of a Washington state police officer who was shot in the head last month while responding to a call says he may be permanently blind as a result of his injuries.
KOMO-TV reports (http://bit.ly/2jhmz2A ) that officer Mike McClaughry's daughter April posted on social media that the family is hoping McClaughry's brain recovers, but it is likely he will never see again.
The post says some doctors say it won't be known for sure if McClaughry can see until he is conscious enough to communicate.
He was responding to a shooting in Mount Vernon, 60 miles north of Seattle, on Dec. 15 when he was shot. After a lengthy standoff at a home, officers arrested Ernesto Lee Rivas, a 44-year-old repeat felon who has been charged with attempted first-degree murder.
___
Information from: KOMO-TV, http://www.komotv.com/
- Updated
MCCALL, Idaho (AP) — A wolverine has been recorded on an Idaho Fish and Game camera near McCall in west-central Idaho as part of a four-state study to determine where the elusive mammals live.
A remote camera recorded at least one wolverine earlier this winter feeding on a deer leg attached to a tree about 12 miles northeast of McCall, the agency reported Friday.
Idaho, Montana, Wyoming and Washington state are taking part in the study to find out if the animals that look like small bears with big claws can be reintroduced to some regions to boost their numbers.
Wolverines, a member of the weasel family, once were found throughout the Rocky Mountains and in California's Sierra Nevada mountain range. They were wiped out across most of the U.S. by the 1930s because of unregulated trapping and poisoning campaigns.
They have since recovered in parts of the West, but not in other areas of their historical range. In the Lower 48 states, an estimated 250 to 300 wolverines survive in remote areas of Montana, Wyoming, Idaho, Oregon and Washington state, according to wildlife officials.
The study that started this winter is using remote cameras and copper brushes to collect DNA. The work is being done in the winter when bears are hibernating so researchers can focus on the wolverines.
Under the plan, the states will come up with a map of wolverine habitat that will be useful for land trust organizations working with private landowners on conservation easements to prevent development.
In Idaho, cameras have been set up in 61 sites.
Fish and Game workers use road-killed deer and elk to attract animals, replacing the bait and checking the cameras' memory cards. Besides the wolverine, the sites have also attracted fishers, martins, foxes, coyotes, wolves and birds.
"So far, we've had an animal of some variety on every camera," said Fish and Game wildlife technician Luke Ferguson in a news release from the agency.
He and fellow technician, Peter Ott, ride snowmobiles and ski into the remotes sites that are typically between 7,000 and 9,000 feet.
Some sites are so remote they can't be reached in winter. At those, a cow's femur is used for bait and a special container drips scent onto it. Those cameras will be checked in the spring.
- By KEITH RIDLER Associated Press
BOISE, Idaho (AP) — A change in U.S. House rules making it easier to transfer millions of acres of federal public lands to states is worrying hunters and other outdoor enthusiasts across the West who fear losing access.
Lawmakers earlier this month passed a rule eliminating a significant budget hurdle and written so broadly that it includes national parks.
President-elect Donald Trump's pick for Interior secretary, Montana Rep. Ryan Zinke, voted for the rule change as did many other Republicans. The Senate would have to weigh in on public land transfers as well.
"Anybody who uses them for any kind of outdoor activity — snowmobiling, mountain biking, hunters, all that — they're very alarmed by all this," said Boise State University professor and public lands policy expert John Freemuth. "The loss of access that this could lead to."
The rule passed by the House defines federal land that could be given to states as "any land owned by the United States, including the surface estate, the subsurface estate, or any improvements thereon."
About a million square miles of public land is managed by the federal government, mostly in 12 Western states, according to the Congressional Research Service. Some state lawmakers in recent years have made failed efforts to wrest control of those lands, mainly to reduce obstacles to accessing resources such as timber, natural gas and oil, Freemuth noted.
U.S. lawmakers have the authority to transfer those lands to states. Outdoor recreationists fear states would then sell the land to private entities that would end public access.
Zinke, whose confirmation hearing to become Interior secretary is Tuesday, has a track record of opposing public land transfers. Last summer, he resigned as a delegate to the Republican National Convention, which favors such transfers.
"The congressman has never voted to sell or transfer federal lands and he maintains his position against the sale or transfer of federal lands," Heather Swift, a Zinke spokeswoman, said in an email.
Whit Fosburgh, CEO of the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership, which works to guarantee places to hunt and fish, said he's inclined to excuse Zinke on his House vote favoring transfers because of his record being "very solid on these public lands issues."
Still, Fosburgh was irked that the House approved a rule that he said essentially allows federal public land to be given away as if it had no value.
Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, also voted for the rule easing transfers. But Simpson was also the driver of a 2015 bill that created three wilderness areas in Idaho after he got ranchers, recreationists and environmental groups to back the plan after a 15-year effort.
The possibility that President Barack Obama would designate a much larger area as a national monument is widely believed to have led to the bill passed by the House and Senate.
"There is no disputing Congressman Simpson is a supporter of public lands," Nikki Wallace, a spokeswoman for Simpson, said in an email.
Freemuth noted that even with a rule change, land transfers would face significant challenges.
"Whatever Zinke says early will affect those attempts," Freemuth said.
He and Fosburgh fear that federal land turned over to states would be too expensive to manage, particularly when it comes to fighting wildfires.
Freemuth believes states would sell land to private entities. Fosburgh was equally dismissive, saying transfers would eventually lead to private owners and no public access.
"You get rid of public lands, you end hunting and fishing in this country as we know it today," Fosburgh said.
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — New Mexico officials say its high school graduation rate climbed to an all-time high of 71 percent last year.
New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez announced the increase in the graduation rate Monday as she pushes for legislative reforms to crack down on truancy and retain more students in third grade if they can't meet literacy requirements.
The rate is up from 68.6 percent in 2015, and about 63 percent in 2011 just after Martinez took office.
The Public Education Department says graduation rates increased at 48 out of 89 school districts in 2016, including districts in Albuquerque, Las Cruces, Gadsden, Santa Fe, Ruidoso, Taos and Carlsbad.
Nationwide, the high school graduation rate was 83 percent in 2015.
BRECKENRIDGE, Colo. (AP) — Authorities say a skier died after hitting a tree at Breckenridge Ski Resort last week.
The Summit Daily News (http://bit.ly/2jiaWbH ) reports that 47-year-old Sean Haberthier of Denver was reported missing Thursday evening and was found unresponsive by searchers Friday morning. Summit County coroner Regan Wood says he wasn't wearing a helmet and died of a severe skull fracture.
Breckenridge vice president John Buhler issued a statement expressing the resort's sympathy for his family and friends.
It's the third ski-related death in Colorado this ski season. Last month, 48-year-old Kevin Pitts of Longmont died after hitting a tree at Breckenridge and 40-year-old Kelly Huber of San Antonio, Texas died after falling from a lift that malfunctioned at Ski Granby Ranch.
Nine people died while skiing or snowboarding in the state last season.
___
Information from: Summit Daily News, http://www.summitdaily.com/
SEATTLE (AP) — The family of a Washington state police officer who was shot in the head last month while responding to a call says he may be permanently blind as a result of his injuries.
KOMO-TV reports (http://bit.ly/2jhmz2A ) that officer Mike McClaughry's daughter April posted on social media that the family is hoping McClaughry's brain recovers, but it is likely he will never see again.
The post says some doctors say it won't be known for sure if McClaughry can see until he is conscious enough to communicate.
He was responding to a shooting in Mount Vernon, 60 miles north of Seattle, on Dec. 15 when he was shot. After a lengthy standoff at a home, officers arrested Ernesto Lee Rivas, a 44-year-old repeat felon who has been charged with attempted first-degree murder.
___
Information from: KOMO-TV, http://www.komotv.com/
MCCALL, Idaho (AP) — A wolverine has been recorded on an Idaho Fish and Game camera near McCall in west-central Idaho as part of a four-state study to determine where the elusive mammals live.
A remote camera recorded at least one wolverine earlier this winter feeding on a deer leg attached to a tree about 12 miles northeast of McCall, the agency reported Friday.
Idaho, Montana, Wyoming and Washington state are taking part in the study to find out if the animals that look like small bears with big claws can be reintroduced to some regions to boost their numbers.
Wolverines, a member of the weasel family, once were found throughout the Rocky Mountains and in California's Sierra Nevada mountain range. They were wiped out across most of the U.S. by the 1930s because of unregulated trapping and poisoning campaigns.
They have since recovered in parts of the West, but not in other areas of their historical range. In the Lower 48 states, an estimated 250 to 300 wolverines survive in remote areas of Montana, Wyoming, Idaho, Oregon and Washington state, according to wildlife officials.
The study that started this winter is using remote cameras and copper brushes to collect DNA. The work is being done in the winter when bears are hibernating so researchers can focus on the wolverines.
Under the plan, the states will come up with a map of wolverine habitat that will be useful for land trust organizations working with private landowners on conservation easements to prevent development.
In Idaho, cameras have been set up in 61 sites.
Fish and Game workers use road-killed deer and elk to attract animals, replacing the bait and checking the cameras' memory cards. Besides the wolverine, the sites have also attracted fishers, martins, foxes, coyotes, wolves and birds.
"So far, we've had an animal of some variety on every camera," said Fish and Game wildlife technician Luke Ferguson in a news release from the agency.
He and fellow technician, Peter Ott, ride snowmobiles and ski into the remotes sites that are typically between 7,000 and 9,000 feet.
Some sites are so remote they can't be reached in winter. At those, a cow's femur is used for bait and a special container drips scent onto it. Those cameras will be checked in the spring.
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