Little official WI urgency about diseased deer

Wisconsin conservation writer Patrick Durkin notes the shoulder shrugs given by leading state officials to the known presence of chronic wasting disease, (CWD), in the Wisconsin deer population and on commercial deer farms: 
Bryan Richards, CWD project leader at the U.S. Geological Survey’s National Wildlife Heath Center in Madison, said the three game farms “constitute a real and significant threat to the integrity of northern Wisconsin’s deer herd.”
Richards said the facilities’ high numbers of CWD-positive deer pose an “ongoing risk of disease escaping into the wild.” In fact, Richards said those numbers are “reminiscent of the Hall Farm in Portage County where prevalence reached nearly 80 percent” in the 70-acre enclosure when DATCP killed its 76 deer in 2006. Sixty of those deer had CWD.
Said former Wisconsin Natural Resources Board chairman Dave Clausen: 
"This is one of the most outrageous human susceptibility experiments in history.”
The lackadaisical, slow-motion attitude Durkin documents by officials at several state agencies reminds me of the Wisconsin DNR's approach to important information that science can provide to the public if the officials act accordingly:

*  When the issue is known drinking water contamination near bug feedlots encouraged to expand in the Walker years, the official response was fewer inspections, less enforcement for violations and allowing operations to keep running even when permits had expired.


*  When the issue is air pollution, Team Walker fought the US EPA over tighter clean air rules, and eliminated Wisconsin's dirty air early warning system, meaning the public is no longer alerted that air quality is deteriorating unless and until pollution levels are recorded which put children, elderly, people with known cardio-vascular conditions or performing outdoor exercise or work at risk.


*  And the DNR scrubbed off its official websites scientific and educational materials about risks posed by a warming climate, though ion you search Google and DNR archives, you will there was a time just before anti-science GOP Governor Scott Walker began to downgrade the DNR that the agency was approaching climate science and change head-on:



*  So little surprise at what Durkin saw and heard from Walker and the DNR about CWD at the recent statewide Wisconsin Conservation Congress:
Its deputy secretary, Kurt Thiede, spent 30 seconds discussing CWD during his 18-minute address to the Wisconsin Conservation Congress at its statewide convention May 12 in Oshkosh.
Thiede said the agency remains committed to limiting CWD’s spread, but didn’t specify how. And he certainly didn’t mention those three infected deer farms or the abysmal 10 percent testing rate in Dane, Iowa, Sauk and Richland counties.
Soon after Thiede’s talk, Gov. Scott Walker used about two of his 22 minutes at the podium to share some “good news” regarding CWD. That is, if you got your deer tested in 2016, you received your results in less than 10 days. As recently as 2012 the DNR averaged 20 days to send results.
Folks, if that’s the only CWD information this administration shares willingly, it knows nothing about news — let alone CWD’s risk to Wisconsin’s deer herd
In other words, the less you know, the better these leaders feel - - even if you don't.

The DNR has a hi-falutin' mission statement about providing a healthy environment and protecting natural resources, but the agency Walker directed be run with a "chamber of commerce mentality' has moved more towards an "Ignorance is bliss" mission statement, or "What, me worry?" made famous by Mad Magazine's Alfred. E. Neuman.


Like this satisfied Wisconsin deer hunter - - don't worry, be happy.

Wisconsin DNR Secretary Cathy Stepp proudly shows off her first deer, taken opening weekend last year. In the upcoming TV Special "Deer Hunt Wisconsin 2012, Stepp urges male hunters to take more girls and women hunting. "The secret's out," she says. "Hunting is a lot of fun, so don't keep it to yourselves." photo courtesy of Wisconsin DNR
The WI DNR released this photo of Secretary Cathy Steps with her first deer kill.



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