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Plan To Open Everglades National Park To Python Hunt Condemned By PEER

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Burmese python in Everglades National Park/NPS

Officials with Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility believe the National Park Service should block the Python Challenge 2016 from being conducted inside Everglades National Park/NPS

A plan to open Everglades National Park up to the "Python Challenge" early next year is both wrong and probably illegal, according to Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, which wants the National Park Service to prevent the hunt from being conducted within the park.

While the snake hunt is intended to reduce the number of non-native Burmese pythons in south Florida, PEER officials maintain the hunt won't likely reduce the number of pythons in the park, that it's unsupported by scientific review, and could lead to similar "hunts" in other parks with non-native species problems, such as Great Smoky Mountains National Park where a feral pig population lives.

The first Python Challenge, sponsored by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, was held in 2013 in lands outside the national park. It led to the capture of 68 snakes, including one more than 14 feet in length.

In supporting next year's hunt, Everglades Superintendent Pedro Ramos said he and his staff "look forward to expanding access into the park and to providing more opportunities for members of the public to become approved authorized python agents."

However, according to PEER, "only once in NPS history has Congress approved the use of deputized agents for removal of wildlife – back in 1950, to reduce the elk population in Grand Teton National Park."

"The Everglades python hunt of 2016 is a misguided publicity stunt that would not improve, let alone solve, the python problem,” said Jeff Ruch, PEER's executive director.  “This would set a terrible precedent for no good reason. Unfortunately, what this episode really reflects is an advancing institutional decay in the quality of national park leadership.”

The aim of the 2016 Python Challenge™ is to promote Everglades conservation through invasive species removal, and the FWC and the Fish and Wildlife Foundation of Florida, Inc., see the hunt as one way to provide training to members of the public so they can help. Training events will teach participants how to identify, report, and then safely and humanely capture Burmese pythons.

While no one disputes that pythons introduced into Everglades National Park are a non-native, invasive species that has altered the park ecosystem, PEER said in a release issued Tuesday, the organization believes some significant obstacles stand in the way of the plan:

* As in most national parks, it is illegal for anyone other than National Park Service employees or contractors to hunt animals of any kind inside Everglades National Park;

* The park has not done the environmental reviews, together with opportunities for public comment, required by federal law, and;

* Despite claiming that the snakes collected will aid scientific research, there is no study design or research proposition to be validated.

Superintendent Ramos' comments in support of the hunt, said PEER's Mr. Ruch, are misguided.

“Superintendent Ramos appears to be making this up as he goes along, but national parks are not supposed to be run from the seat of someone’s pants,” he said. “Most people already know that Everglades has a python problem, but it is utterly mysterious why putting on a contest will avert the arrival of more invasive species.

"... The Everglades python hunt of 2016 is a misguided publicity stunt that would not improve, let alone solve, the python problem,” added Mr. Ruch. “This would set a terrible precedent for no good reason. Unfortunately, what this episode really reflects is an advancing institutional decay in the quality of national park leadership.”

Comments

"There are books of regulations for compliance"

There in lies one of the problems.


Speaking as someone who manages compliance for an NPS site I find it amazing that a park of this size couldn't put together a compliance package for this that concluded no historic properties were effected and that this action, the removal of individuals of a non T/E species that were threating resources, was covered by a categorical conclusion. This would have taken all of an hour of somebody's time. The superintendent could have easily signed off on this and moved on. This appears not to be the case. And this is the same kind of decision making process that led to the Effigy Mounds fiasco. Too many managers in the agency do not meet their legal obligations because of a desire to see their decisions put into action without any possible delay or criticism from their staff. This is exacerbated by the reality of an agency that desires to not hold its managers accountable in public. There is nothing wrong with removing or killing invasive snakes in the Everglades. There is nothing in the law that prohibits the NPS from undertaking such a program. But starting such a program while apparently not following the legally mandated compliance process, all for the sake of the appearance of a superintendent's career and their ability to "get things done," is the problem. And its not just happening at Everglades.


The downside? Well the downside people would need  kill pythons and the problem is they might have to use guns you know guns is a bad thing guns of something this country should never have had after all if we hadn't had guns maybe we would be speaking German now I don't know maybe people just don't like other people to enjoy their favorite pastime and many people are truly power hungry I've been to the Everglades it doesn't appear that's going to infringe upon anyone whatsoever except some people just hate the idea that other people might enjoy a sport they can't understand 


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