Associated Press
WAUSAU, Wis. — When Wisconsin wildlife officials first asked hunters to kill hundreds of deer to test for a fatal brain disease found in southern Wisconsin, more than 600 people volunteered for the job.
But now the state wants to destroy all the deer in a 361-square-mile area starting in June, and hunters are balking, saying authorities are moving too fast and going against long-held hunting traditions.
"It has been nothing but panic, panic, panic. We are saying slow down," said Mark Kessenich, a hunter who owns 80 acres in the hot zone west of Madison.
Other hunters say they support trying to eradicate chronic wasting disease from Wisconsin’s 1.6 million deer herd by targeting animals in the infected hot zone. But they won’t hunt until fall — the traditional time.
The crisis began in February when the state Department of Natural Resources announced that three deer shot earlier near Mount Horeb tested positive for chronic wasting disease, the first time it had been found east of the Mississippi River.
"We need to get these animals killed," said Steve Oestreicher, chairman of the Wisconsin Conservation Congress, which represents thousands of hunters and believes the state has the right strategy.
"All eyes in the nation are on Wisconsin," he said. "If this is indeed a crisis, the governor would be wise to very seriously consider even calling out the National Guard on this. The hunters and sharpshooters are not going to get them all."
A special spring hunt was ordered to determine the spread of the disease. Hunters killed 516 deer in the Mount Horeb area; 15 of them were found to be infected.
The DNR then announced its plan to kill nearly 15,000 deer in the area beginning in June, in hopes of keeping the disease from spreading to the rest of the herd.
That’s when some hunters began questioning the plan.
Kessenich, 50, and five other people formed Citizens Against Irrational Deer Slaughter and is considering suing to stop the killing.
Landowner and hunter Mark Sherven said the state’s timing is off. Instead of killing deer now, the DNR should test every deer carcass during traditional hunts this fall to provide a better picture of the disease’s spread, and to reassure hunters their venison is disease-free, he said.
"I give the DNR credit for not dragging their feet, but I think they are pulling the trigger a little bit too quick on this one," he said.
Copyright ©2002 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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