Boundary County Commissioners will hold a public
meeting at 6 p.m. Thursday, April 19, at the
Becker Auditorium at Bonners Ferry High School
for everyone concerned about a U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service proposal to set aside more than
600 square miles of North Idaho and eastern
Washington as critical habitat for the Woodland
Caribou.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will also
hold a public informational meeting on the issue
from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Saturday, April 28, also
in the Becker Auditorium, to be followed by a
public hearing from 2 to 5 p.m., during which
citizens will be able to provide formal comments
on the proposal.
“The commissioner’s meeting is being held so
that people interested in the proposal can ask
questions and learn exactly what the proposal
entails, so they might have accurate information
and data upon which to base their formal
testimony, either at the public hearing or in
writing,” said Commission Chair Ron Smith.
Representatives from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service will be on hand during the
commissioner’s meeting to answer questions and
explain the proposal.
Also attending to learn the details of the
proposal will be Boundary County civil counsel
Phil Robinson, Idaho Senators Shawn Keough and
Joyce Broadsword, Representatives Eric Anderson
and George Eskridge, and representatives from
the offices of Idaho Governor Butch Otter, U.S.
Senators James Risch and Mike Crapo and U.S.
Representative Raul Labrador.
“As commissioners, we are encouraged that our
state and federal representatives have agreed to
be here to listen to the concerns and fears of
Boundary County citizens,” Smith said. “They
were all supportive and instrumental in bringing
about resolution of the ordeal Jeremy Hill and
his family went through, and they’ve all
acknowledged their support of our concerns on
the caribou issue.”
On learning of the caribou habitat proposal,
Boundary County Commissioners took action and
were successful in obtaining a 60-day extension
of the initial USFWS deadline for written
comment until May 21, 2012, as well as bringing
the informational meetings and a formal federal
public hearing to Boundary County, providing an
opportunity for everyone affected to ask
questions and learn for themselves what the
ramifications of the proposal are.
“This is an issue of grave concern for a lot of
Boundary County residents, and it’s our hope, as
county commissioners, that people will avail
themselves the opportunity to learn all they can
so that their formal comments, either written or
verbal, will be more effective,” Smith said. |