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A DECENT RECORD, BUT NOT EXACTLY A VISIONARY

Did My 2007 Predictions Come True?


By Bill Schneider, 12-26-07

It seems to me that predicting the news is a little like predicting the weather. You can be wrong most of the time and still keep your job. I hope the same is true for me.

Last December, I made some bold predictions on what outdoor news you might hear in 2007 and promised to report on if they came true. Here’s my report.

  • Prediction: Brother Wolf will still be the Top Dog in 2007 and continue as the top outdoor story. In fact, the multi-headed controversy growing out of the 1996 restoration project will become so pervasive in the news that even wolf fans might get tired of it and go back to reading the comics.
    Report: The wolf continued as a big story, if not the biggest, but as the year progressed, it sometimes slipped off the front page. And I’d say people are getting weary of hearing about how evil the wolf is.

  • Prediction: And I’ll really go out on a limb and predict that the wolf population will continue to grow in 2007. Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne will push hard for delisting. Idaho and Wyoming will propose aggressive reductions in wolf numbers. EarthJustice will sue both states and the feds over delisting and control plans. And at the end of year nothing will have happened except that we’ll have more wolves.
    Report: Pretty close. Enviros are a little slow on filing the lawsuits, but the rest was spot on.

  • Prediction: Federal wildlife officials will forge forward with plans to officially delist the Yellowstone grizzly population. EarthJustice will drag this victory akin to the whooping crane and bald eagle and use it as an example of why we need the Endangered Species Act.
    Report: True.

  • But the Big Bear won’t be nearly as controversial as the Big Dog.
    Report: True.

  • Over at the Forest Service, the entire Recreation Site Facility Master Planning process (RSFMP) will reach the level of controversy it deserves. Then, it will either implode from pressure from the new Blue Green Congress or, I fear, succeed as planned. I see the RSFMP as a planned “negotiation” between the Bush Administration and us, the people who use and value public land. Faced with the threat of thousands of campgrounds and picnic areas closing or being privatized, we’ll be happy if it turns out to be hundreds instead of thousands, which has probably been the real plan all along. I call this the Gas Pump Dynamic. Prices go from $1.50 to $3.00 and then go down to $2.25 and we’re happy because gas prices went down, right? Oil companies get exactly what they wanted all along, and we accept it.
    Report: Not quite true. Yes, regrettably, hundreds of campgrounds did close or were privatized. The process of minimizing and privatizing outdoor recreation on public lands became as controversial as predicted, but the result was better than predicted. Senators Max Baucus (D-MT) and Mike Crapo (R-ID) introduced a bill to repeal the Federal Lands Recreation Enhancement Act of 2004, the law that makes all this insanity possible.

  • Prediction: Also following the Gas Pump Dynamic, we’ll continue to accept the new and ever-increasing recreational fees to park, camp, picnic, hike, bike, climb, fish, hunt or even drive through our public lands because that’s how we are. Certain members of Congress will complain about recreational fees, but they will not make it a priority that results in a reversal of our current downward spiral towards commercialization of our public lands.
    Report: Half true. Fees continued to increase and proliferate, but I am delighted to be wrong about Congress not noticing and making it a priority. Witness the Baucus-Crapo bill.

  • Prediction: Even in the aftermath of the Great Elk Escape, the Idaho Legislature won’t do anything meaningful to control the spread of game farms and move closer to becoming another Texas. Frustrated elk hunters will start the process of passing a ballot initiative to save elk hunting in Idaho.
    Report: Sad but true, the Idaho legislature did nothing. More sad, though, Idaho elk hunters did nothing. No ballot initiative proposed to date, and even though I’ve inquired several times, no current plans to do so. Game farmers won the war in Idaho.

  • Prediction: The Nation of Wyoming will continue to ignore pressure from other states and sport groups to close state-run elk feedgrounds or do anything to defuse the Chronic Wasting Disease Time Bomb. And efforts to control CWD infestations in other states like Colorado and Wisconsin will continue to fail.
    Report: True. But in a classic do-as-say-not-as-do exercise, the Wyoming Game and Fish Department did encourage residents not to feed elk and other big game animals.

  • Prediction: We’ll see a major, regional Wilderness bill introduced into 110th Congress, but it won’t pass, but one or two small quid pro quo bills might pass.
    Report: Half true. The Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act was introduced and didn’t pass, but no smaller bills were even introduced. More on that in coming weeks.

  • Prediction: Market forces such as high energy and construction costs and soaring land prices will start to slow rural sprawl that is incrementally destroying wildlife habitat throughout the New West.
    Report: If this came true, it was only slightly and not obvious.

  • Prediction: Gridlock between natural allies for Wilderness, mountain bikers and hikers, will continue if not intensify, helping keep the expectations for any major Wilderness legislation low.
    Report: True.

  • Prediction: Educational programs will start making some progress towards developing a sharing attitude among motorists and cyclists on our paved roadways.
    Report: In my personal experience, it seems like this might be true, but no way to calculate or prove it.

  • Prediction: And finally, I predict that the biggest outdoor story of them all won’t even be considered an outdoor story. The Trillion Dollar War will continue to suck federal and state wildlife and natural resources agency budgets dry and affect wildlife management and outdoor recreation in more negative ways than we could count.
    Report: So sad and so true, and I made a slight miscalculation on the cost. From now on, I’ll more correctly call it The Three Trillion Dollar War.



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