Feds release North Cascades grizzly bear analysis; decision to come next month

Mar. 21—The federal government announced on Thursday it wants to release up to seven grizzly bears each year into Washington's North Cascades. The reintroduction effort would stop when the base population reaches 25 bears.

Officials from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and National Park Service on Thursday released their final analysis of options for bringing the bruins back to the Cascades. The bears would be part of an "experimental" population, which would give wildlife officials more options for killing or relocating bears that have run-ins with people and livestock.

The agencies were careful to say that the document released Thursday doesn't represent a final decision. Federal regulations state that a final decision can't be released until 30 days after the final environmental analysis is released.

Still, Thursday's announcement represents a major milestone in the push to bring grizzlies back to the mountains between Snoqualmie Pass and the Canada border, where there hasn't been a confirmed sighting of the large omnivores in more than two decades.

Friends of the North Cascades Grizzly Bear, a coalition of organizations that includes tribes and conservation groups, celebrated the moment in a news release.

Snoqualmie Indian Tribe Tribal Chairman Robert M. de los Angeles said in the release that the tribe is excited "to know that this hard-fought effort to bring home grizzlies is so close to becoming a reality.

"This is a critical moment in history, with governments, organizations, and individuals working together to welcome grizzlies back after human action removed them from their home," de los Angeles said.

Opponents of reintroduction have raised concerns that reintroduced bears could pose a threat to humans and livestock. Rep. Dan Newhouse, R-Sunnyside, among the most vocal critics of the plan, said in an emailed statement Thursday that the final analysis shows "the Biden Administration is more intent on pushing policies about Central Washingtonians than for them."

"The Fish and Wildlife Service and National Park Service held public comment sessions in my district where the overwhelming majority of voices, which I heard firsthand, were adamantly opposed to the introduction of grizzly bears," Newhouse said. "Their voices have been shut out of this entire process."

Grizzly bears have a long history in the North Cascades, dating back thousands of years. Nationwide, the Fish and Wildlife Service estimates there were as many as 50,000 grizzlies spread across 18 Western states before 1800.