Yellowstone chief says he is ousted after
dispute with Trump administration
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[June 08, 2018]
By Laura Zuckerman
PINEDALE, Wyo. (Reuters) - The
superintendent of Yellowstone National Park said on Thursday he was
being forced from his post after disagreeing with the Trump
administration over management of the park’s famed bison herd.
Dan Wenk, who has led one of the nation's most popular national parks
since 2011, said in an interview broadcast by public radio that he and
his boss, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, had been at odds over bison but
that he believed they had settled their differences.
"I thought we were on track and I thought that he was very supportive of
what we were doing and how we were doing it and that we were going to
get it done,” Wenk told the Mountain West News Bureau, without
specifying the nature of their disagreement.
Conflicts have raged for years over how many bison the park can sustain
and methods used to keep the population contained.
The park’s practice of capturing and shipping to slaughter a certain
number of bison that wander from Yellowstone in winter in search of food
in Montana, Zinke’s home state, is driven in part by ranchers there who
are concerned about competition for rangelands and about the spread of
brucellosis, a disease carried by some bison that can cause cows to
miscarry.
During Wenk’s tenure, the park has argued Yellowstone can withstand many
more bison than the target of 3,000 that is supported by the Montana
Department of Livestock and the ranchers it represents.
Montana cattlemen also have raised alarms about a program instituted
under Wenk’s leadership that seeks to distribute brucellosis-free bison
from Yellowstone to Native American tribes in Montana and elsewhere.
Interior Department spokeswoman Heather Swift did not respond to a
request from Reuters about any disagreements over bison management.
But she said in an email that Zinke had been “out front” in carrying out
orders by President Donald Trump to reorganize the federal government
for the future.
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A herd of bison graze in Lamar Valley in Yellowstone National Park,
Wyoming, U.S. on June 20, 2011. REUTERS/Jim Urquhart/File Photo
She said personnel moves for those who, like Wenk, are in the senior
executive service “are conducted to better serve the taxpayer and
the Department’s operations.”
Wenk said earlier this month that he planned to retire in 2019,
without alluding to any policy disputes with superiors.
In Thursday's interview, however, he said he had been told by the
acting chief of the National Park Service, a branch of the Interior
Department, that he needed either to accept reassignment to a new
post in Washington, D.C., or retire early in August.
"I'm feeling like I devoted 43 years of my life, I think I have a
record of achievement with the National Park Service that at the end
of the day doesn't matter and that I'm no longer wanted at
Yellowstone National Park," Wenk told Mountain West, which is aired
in Wyoming and other Western states.
“Even though I told them I was going to retire, that seemed not to
make a difference, so extremely disappointed is probably a mild way
to explain it,” he said.
Wenk could not immediately be reached by Reuters.
Yellowstone, which occupies the northwestern corner of Wyoming and
parts of Idaho and Montana, is home to the nation’s last large herd
of wild, purebred bison. Millions flock to the park annually to view
the bison and other wildlife and natural wonders.
(Reporting by Laura Zuckerman; Writing by Steve Gorman; Editing by
Peter Cooney and Bill Tarrant)
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