Union Members for the Preservation of Wildlife/ Western Washington Chapter

Union Members for the Preservation of Wildlife/ Western Washington Chapter To help protect the rights of animals and wildlife in the United States. Open to any persons. .

02/08/2024

😂😂😂 True! 💯

01/31/2024

Ha! 😉😎😁 ~ wild rose 🌹

11/21/2023

🦝😍🦨

https://www.facebook.com/palmoilfreecertification/photos/a.1938367943103352/2239539066319570/?type=3&theater
01/05/2019

https://www.facebook.com/palmoilfreecertification/photos/a.1938367943103352/2239539066319570/?type=3&theater

Thousands of flora & fauna species & humans rely on Rainforests around the globe.

COMPANIES if you make products which are palm oil free please consider getting them certified so that consumers have a guarantee that they are genuinely 100% palm oil free. See our website for details http://www.palmoilfreecertification.org/how-to-apply

CONSUMERS please let companies know that you would like them to have their products certified by the world’s first independent International Palm Oil Free Certification Accreditation Programme.

Certification will give them an ethical, trustworthy Palm Oil Free Certification Trademark to put on their products to make your purchasing decisions easier.

All profits from the Certification Programme will purchase Rainforest Land via NGOs on the ground working to protect the rainforests in their area and that's something worth getting passionate about. http://www.palmoilfreecertification.org/

Lynn Smith3 mins ¡ o Rainforest No Howler Monkeys. Howler Monkeys communicate in a highly sophisticated way adapted to t...
01/05/2019

Lynn Smith
3 mins ¡
o Rainforest No Howler Monkeys.
Howler Monkeys communicate in a highly sophisticated way adapted to the situations in which they are found (presence of threat, during a meal, when a member is separated from the group, etc ...) Let us make sure we protect the Rainforest for years to come so we continue to have Howler Monkeys in the Wild.

A male red howler monkey proves his vocal stamina. In howler monkeys, expanded vocal tracts make for louder males with smaller te**es, researchers find. Read...

Please sign and share!!! grrrrrrrr
01/05/2019

Please sign and share!!! grrrrrrrr

Sign the petition calling for justice for the black bears that were baited, hunted and mauled to death by hunting dogs in Florida.

01/05/2019

Call of the westside: Don't shoot wolves

WDFW shoots one wolf in NE Washington

The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife would not be allowed to kill any wolves in Eastern Washington under a proposal by a Western Washington legislator.

A Western Washington lawmaker has introduced a bill to bar the state Department of Fish and Wildlife from killing wolves in the eastern one-third of the state.

Federal law already prohibits lethal control of wolves in the western two-thirds of Washington. The prohibition should be statewide, proposes Rep. Sherry Appleton, a Democrat who represents Bainbridge Island across Puget Sound from Seattle.

Rep. Joel Kretz, a Republican in wolf-populated northeast Washington, said he may draw inspiration from the proposal. “It makes me think of introducing a bill to turn Bainbridge Island into a wolf reserve,” he said Monday.

Kretz really did sponsor legislation in 2013 to release wolves on Whidbey Island, also in Puget Sound. It was an offer — derided as a stunt and unaccepted — to share wolves with lawmakers who oppose culling livestock-attacking packs.

Since then, the number of wolves in Kretz’s district has more than doubled, while no wolf has been documented farther west than eastern Skagit County.

Kretz said ranchers in his district have come “10,000 miles” in accepting wolves and working to minimize conflicts, but shooting wolves when all else fails remains contentious. He called Appleton’s bill “discouraging.”

“That’s the biggest problem we have in the state — the disconnect,” Kretz said. “How could anybody be so tone deaf to the real-world problems people are having with wolves?”

Efforts to reach Appleton on Monday were unsuccessful. She also introduced a bill to prohibit Fish and Wildlife from using hound hunters to pursue and kill cougars, bobcats, black bears and lynx to protect livestock, pets or humans.

On the same day the two bills were filed, House Democrats announced Appleton will chair the Council of State Governments West’s public safety committee. The council is a forum for developing policy ideas for 13 states.

Appleton’s proposals appear to have little chance of passing. House Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee Chairman Brian Blake, D-Aberdeen, said Monday that the wolf bill was “unworkable” and called the hound-pursuit bill “an emotional response.”

He said Appleton’s wolf bill would “blow up the cooperation” between different groups. “It seems counter-productive,” he said.

Fish and Wildlife wolf policy coordinator Donny Martorello said lethal removal is an element in meeting the needs of everyone concerned about wolves. Other elements include measures that foster a healthy number of wolves, as well as deer and elk. Martorello said the department sees these seemingly disparate goals as complementary.

“There is no suite of non-lethal tools that are guaranteed to prevent depredations or change behavior once depredations start,” he said.

Appleton’s wolf bill would allow Fish and Wildlife to relocate wolves that are attacking livestock. Fish and Wildlife officials have looked at doing that and decided against it.

Wolves have a tendency to roam back to their original location. The journey also increases the chances they will have fatal encounters with humans, vehicles and other wolves, according to wildlife managers. “It’s risky to move across the landscape,” Martorello said.

At the Legislature’s direction, Fish and Wildlife will study moving wolves from northeast Washington to unoccupied areas to speed up recovery. Fish and Wildlife plans to start the study early next year.

Kretz said he may introduce a bill to remove wolves from the state-protected species list in Eastern Washington, where wolves have surpassed recovery goals. The bill wouldn’t dictate how wolves would be managed, but it might call for a new group of northeast Washington residents to work out a post de-listing plan, he said.

Kretz said he may pitch the policy as a chance to show how wolves can be handled once they’ve colonized other parts of the state.

https://www.capitalpress.com/state/washington/call-of-the-westside-don-t-shoot-wolves/article_7b1c3452-0227-11e9-9736-9f0a7e304413.html

Photo: Wdfw

Randal Massaro20 hrs ¡ A BIG WIN FOR ANIMAL RIGHTS AND THE ANIMALS THAT ARE KILLED .JUST IN CASE YOU HAVENT SEE THIS YET...
12/29/2018

Randal Massaro
20 hrs ¡
A BIG WIN FOR ANIMAL RIGHTS AND THE ANIMALS THAT ARE KILLED .JUST IN CASE YOU HAVENT SEE THIS YET ---TAKE A LOOK, SMILE AND CELEBRATE

The Los Angeles City Council has unanimously voted to approve drafting an ordinance to ban fur sales in the city.

12/29/2018

A total of 1,070 occupied bald eagle nests were counted in this year's survey by the Center for Conservation Biology at the College of Willi...

Please sign and share!!! Washington has become as ignorant and brutal as much as Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming put togethe...
12/29/2018

Please sign and share!!! Washington has become as ignorant and brutal as much as Idaho, Montana, and
Wyoming put together. The wolves in Wa need us bad right now!!! We are their only voice in this sick fight for their right to live!

Wolves in Washington need your help. Be a voice for these iconic animals. Urge state wildlife officials to stop authorizing the killing of wolf families.

Please sign and share!!!
12/25/2018

Please sign and share!!!

Hi 👋, Wolves are one of the most misunderstood animals in the world. They are regarded by some as dangerous animals. This is (133 signatures on petition)

12/24/2018

The management at Samutprakarn Crocodile Farm and Zoo in Thailand has been ordered by the country’s Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation to remove two thin elephants from the park’s performance schedule until their health improves. Following an outpour of complaints abou...

12/23/2018

Breaking news: WTO rules to protect dolphins from tuna fishing fleets

The World Trade Organization delivered a decisive victory today to protect dolphins in one of the longest-running global fights for animal welfare. All tuna sold in the United States with the dolphin-safe label must be caught using methods designed to protect dolphins from harm. Fishing fleets that intentionally chase down, harass and set nets on dolphins as a way of catching the schools of tuna that swim beneath the dolphins will not be able to sell their tuna as “dolphin-safe” in our country.

For 30 years now, the Humane Society of the United States and Humane Society International have been battling the Mexican government and factions in the U.S. Congress to protect dolphins from fleets that target them, often injuring and killing them in attempts to catch the tuna that swim below them. But with the WTO’s appellate body today upholding a panel ruling from October 2017 that found that the U.S. amendments to its dolphin-safe labeling regime brought it into compliance with WTO rules, the battle appears to be over.

I have been involved in this campaign since my earliest days at the HSUS back in the early 1990s. Little did I know that it would take nearly three decades for the legal battles to conclude, but I am overjoyed with the result. I am proud of my colleagues for staying the course, fighting long and hard and often against tough odds, in order to prevent the injuring and drowning of extraordinary numbers of dolphins — with some estimates running in excess of seven million killed in the last few decades.

Read more here: http://bit.ly/2QGsQJ6

Photo: iStockphoto

Address

Rainier, WA
98576

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Union Members for the Preservation of Wildlife/ Western Washington Chapter posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share