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Plumas supervisors declare local state of emergency over gray wolves, authorize letter seeking more local control
Summary
The Plumas County Board of Supervisors unanimously adopted a resolution declaring a local state of emergency tied to gray wolf activity and authorized the chair to send a letter to the state director requesting additional local public safety response options.
The Plumas County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously April 15 to declare a local state of emergency citing increased wolf predation on livestock and threats to public safety.
Chair Jeff Goss moved the measure with a second; the board then approved a companion item authorizing the chair to sign a letter to California Fish and Wildlife Director Bonham requesting expanded local options for wolf management.
Why it matters: Supervisors said wolf activity has escalated in several parts of the county and is affecting livestock operations and…
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