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TAKE ACTION! URGE GREENWOOD VILLAGE (CO)TO ADOPT AN ECOLOGICALLY AND ETHICALLY SOUND COYOTE MANAGEMENT PLAN Greenwood Village, Colorado has become a hot zone for human-coyote conflicts in recent months with city officials taking a decidedly lethal approach toward coyote management. To date police and a sharpshooter hired by Greenwood Village have killed at least six coyotes this year, when the city council authorized lethal coyote control. At least 2 of the 6 shot coyotes ran off after being shot and wounded. The controversy has pitted wildlife advocates against those who want coyotes removed and highlights the divisiveness the presence of this native carnivore has brought to communities nationwide.
“Coyote in Greenwood Village” by Jay Tuchton What makes this situation unique is that the adjacent town of Centennial has chosen a very different approach to coyote-human coexistence. Centennial has enacted a coyote management policy that places emphasis on public education and outreach, reduction in coyote attractants, and hazing of habituated coyotes where deemed necessary. Lethal control is a last resort. The city of Denver has adopted a similar proactive management plan that emphasizes tolerance and the role people play in mitigating negative encounters with coyotes. Denver also has one of the most proactive hazing programs in the country. Representatives and volunteers from Colorado-based WildEarth Guardians have taken it upon themselves to conduct hazing in Greenwood Village in an effort to reduce negative coyote-human encounters and to keep coyotes from being needlessly destroyed. Despite these efforts, city officials continue to authorize lethal control and have refused to work with wildlife advocates and coyote experts who have offered assistance. The controversy has brought coyote-human interaction to a head in Colorado and raises fundamental questions about coyote management at the local and state level. In a recent meeting with the Colorado Division of Wildlife (CDOW), Dr. Marc Bekoff, who has studied coyotes for nearly four decades, and is also on the advisory board of Project Coyote, joined representatives from WildEarth Guardians and HSUS to discuss coyote management issues in Colorado. Dr. Bekoff emphasized the lack of detailed information about the social behavior and population dynamics of coyotes on the front range of Colorado, and that these data are essential for understanding coyote ecology and behavior to reduce negative encounters. While the CDOW does not control municipal approaches to coyote management, they have oversight over the species at a state level and heavily influence public perception and local management. Greenwood Village has an opportunity to follow the lead of neighboring cities and implement a proactive, long-term approach to coyote management that emphasizes public awareness, tolerance, and the role humans play in reducing (and creating) negative encounters with coyotes and other urban wildlife.
TAKE ACTION!
Address letters to: You can also contact Mayor Nancy Sharpe via email (nsharpe@greenwoodvillage.com) or call her at 303-486-5741 and make the same points.
Please also cc your letter to:
SAMPLE LETTER
Mayor Nancy Sharpe
Dear Ms. Sharpe: Greenwood Village has an opportunity to follow the lead of neighboring cities and implement a proactive, long-term approach to coyote management that emphasizes public awareness, tolerance, and the role of human behaviors in mitigating negative encounters with coyotes. Such programs also recognize the important ecological role of coyotes in maintaining ecosystem health and species diversity. I urge you to cease the killing of coyotes and instead work with wildlife organizations to implement a proactive, humane program that prioritizes coexisting with, rather than destroying, Greenwood Village’s coyotes. Thank you for your consideration. I look forward to your response.
(Your Name)
Letters to the Editor to the Denver Post Needed!
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