(Amendment)
DAR File No.: 40093
Filed: 01/11/2016 11:53:17 AMRULE ANALYSIS
Purpose of the rule or reason for the change:
This rule is being amended pursuant to Regional Advisory Council and Wildlife Board meetings conducted annually for taking public input and reviewing the Division of Wildlife Resources� (DWR) rule pursuant to taking bear.
Summary of the rule or change:
The proposed revisions are the following: 1) remove the requirement for the US Forest Service (USFS) (at their request) to provide permission to a hunter prior to their application for a certificate of registration to place a bait station on their lands. The USFS will no longer provide written permission for this activity; and 2) make technical corrections as needed.
State statutory or constitutional authorization for this rule:
Anticipated cost or savings to:
the state budget:
This amendment removes a requirement to bait on USFS property. DWR determines that these amendments do not create a cost or savings impact to the state budget, since the changes will not increase workload and can be carried out with existing budget.
local governments:
Since this amendment removes a requirement at the request of the impacted agency (USFS), this filing does not create any direct cost or savings impact to any local governments. Nor are local governments indirectly impacted because the rule does not create a situation requiring services from local governments.
small businesses:
Since this amendment removes an additional requirement for hunters wishing to place a bait station on forest service lands, the division feels this amendment will not generate a cost or savings impact to small businesses.
persons other than small businesses, businesses, or local governmental entities:
Since this amendment removes an additional requirement for hunters wishing to place a bait station on forest service lands, the division feels this amendment will not generate a cost or savings impact to other persons.
Compliance costs for affected persons:
DWR determines that these amendments do not create additional costs for sportsmen wishing to have a bait station on forest service lands in Utah.
Comments by the department head on the fiscal impact the rule may have on businesses:
The amendments to this rule do not create an impact on businesses.
Michael R. Styler, Executive Director
The full text of this rule may be inspected, during regular business hours, at the Division of Administrative Rules, or at:
Natural Resources
Wildlife Resources
1594 W NORTH TEMPLE
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84116-3154Direct questions regarding this rule to:
- Staci Coons at the above address, by phone at 801-538-4718, by FAX at 801-538-4709, or by Internet E-mail at stacicoons@utah.gov
Interested persons may present their views on this rule by submitting written comments to the address above no later than 5:00 p.m. on:
03/02/2016
This rule may become effective on:
03/09/2016
Authorized by:
Gregory Sheehan, Director
RULE TEXT
R657. Natural Resources, Wildlife Resources.
R657-33. Taking Bear.
R657-33-1. Purpose and Authority.
(1) Under authority of Sections 23-14-18 and 23-14-19, of the Utah Code, the Wildlife Board has established this rule for taking and pursuing bear.
(2) Specific dates, areas, number of permits, limits and other administrative details which may change annually are published in the guidebook of the Wildlife Board for taking and pursuing bear.
R657-33-13. Certificate of Registration Required for Bear Baiting.
(1) A certificate of registration for baiting must be obtained before establishing a bait station.
(2) Certificates of registration for bear baiting are issued only to holders of limited entry permits authorizing the use of bait, as provided in the guidebook of the Wildlife Board for taking bear.
(3) A certificate of registration may be obtained from the division office within the region where the bait station will be established.
(4) A new certificate of registration must be obtained prior to moving a bait station. All materials used as bait must be removed from the old site prior to the issuing of a new certificate of registration.
(5) The following information must be provided to obtain a certificate of registration for baiting: a 1:24000 USGS quad map with the bait location marked, or the Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) or latitude and longitude coordinates of the bait station, including the datum, type of bait used and written permission from the appropriate landowner for private lands.
(6)(a) Any person interested in baiting on lands administered by the[
U.S. Forest Service or] Bureau of Land Management must verify that the lands are open to baiting before applying for and receiving a certificate of registration for bear baiting.(b) Information on areas that are open to baiting on National Forests must be obtained from district offices.[
Baiting locations and applicable travel restrictions must be verified by the district supervisor prior to applying for a certificate of registration.](c) Areas generally closed to baiting stations by these federal agencies include:
(i) designated Wilderness Areas;
(ii) heavily used drainages or recreation areas; and
(iii) critical watersheds.
(d) The division shall send a copy of the certificate of registration to the private landowner or appropriate district office of the land management agency that manages the land where the bait station will be placed, as identified by the hunter on the application for a certificate of registration.
(e) Issuance of a certificate of registration for baiting does not authorize an individual to bait if it is otherwise unlawful to bait under the regulations of the applicable land management agency.
(7) A handling fee must accompany the application.
(8) Only hunters listed on the certificate of registration may hunt over the bait station and the certificate of registration must be in possession while hunting over the bait station.
(9) Any person tending a bait station must be listed on the certificate of registration.
R657-33-23. Livestock and Commercial Crop Depredation.
(1) If a bear is harassing, chasing, disturbing, harming, attacking or killing livestock, or has committed such an act within the past 72 hours:
(a) the livestock owner, an immediate family member or an employee of the owner on a regular payroll, and not hired specifically to take bear, may kill the bear;
(b) a landowner or livestock owner may notify the division of the depredating bear and the division may:
(i) authorize a local hunter to take a bear using a valid permit; or
(ii) request that the offending bear be removed by Wildlife Services specialist, supervised by the USDA Wildlife Program; or
(c) the livestock owner may notify a Wildlife Services specialist of the depredation, and that specialist or another agency employee may take the depredating bear.
(2) Depredating bear may be taken at any time by a Wildlife Services specialist while acting in the performance of the person's assigned duties and in accordance with procedures approved by the division.
(3) A depredating bear may be taken by those persons authorized in Subsection (1)(a) with:
(a) any weapon authorized for taking bear; or
(b) snares only with written authorization from the director of the division and subject to all the conditions and restrictions set out in the written authorization.
(i) The option in Subsection (3)(b) may only be authorized in the case of chronic depredation verified by Wildlife Services or division personnel where numerous livestock have been killed by a depredating bear.
(4)(a) The division may issue one or more control permits to an owner or lessee of private land to remove a bear causing damage to cultivated crops on cleared and planted land provided the following conditions are satisfied:
(i) the landowner or lessee contacts the appropriate division office within 72 hours of the damage occurring or provides documentation of previous chronic damage incidents;
(ii) the damaged cultivated crop is raised and utilized by the landowner or lessee for commercial gain and with a reasonable expectation of generating a profit;
(iii) at least 5 acres of the private land is placed in agricultural use pursuant to Section 59-2-502 and eligible for agricultural use valuation as provided in Sections 59-2-503 and 59-2-504;
(iv) the division confirms that the private land where the cultivated crop occurs has experienced chronic recurring damage from bears, or that there will likely be chronic recurring damage if offending bears are not immediately removed;
(v) the landowner, an immediate family member, or an employee of the owner on a regular payroll, and not hired specifically to take bear, receives the control permit from the division to remove the bear prior to initiating such action; and
(vi) the bear removal is otherwise in accordance with Utah law.
(b) The division may issue control permits described in Subsection (4)(v) [
and] to identify restrictions necessary [to]and to balance the threat to commercial crops on cleared and planted land and the wildlife resource, such as:(i) locations on the landowner or lessee's private property where offending bears may be taken;
(ii) the total number of control permits that may be issued; and
(iii) reporting requirements to the division.
(c) Nothing herein mandates the division to issue control permits for a landowner or lessee to remove bears from their private property in lieu of:
(i) the landowner or lessee taking nonlethal preventative measures in protecting their private property; and
(ii) the division undertaking wildlife management techniques as they deem appropriate.
(5)(a) Any bear taken pursuant to Subsections (1)(a) and (4) shall:
(i) be delivered to a division office or employee within 48 hours; and
(ii) remain the property of the state, except the division may sell a bear damage permit to a person who has killed a depredating bear if that person wishes to maintain possession of the bear.
(b) A person may only retain one bear carcass annually under this Section.
(6)(a) Hunters interested in taking depredating bear as provided in Subsection (1)(b) may contact the division.
(b) Hunters will be contacted by the division to take depredating bear as needed.
KEY: wildlife, bear, game laws
Date of Enactment or Last Substantive Change: [
March 16, 2015]2016Notice of Continuation: December 5, 2012
Authorizing, and Implemented or Interpreted Law: 23-14-18; 23-14-19; 23-13-2
Document Information
- Effective Date:
- 3/9/2016
- Publication Date:
- 02/01/2016
- Type:
- Notices of Proposed Rules
- Filed Date:
- 01/11/2016
- Agencies:
- Natural Resources, Wildlife Resources
- Rulemaking Authority:
Section 23-14-19
Section 23-14-18
- Authorized By:
- Gregory Sheehan, Director
- DAR File No.:
- 40093
- Summary:
The proposed revisions are the following: 1) remove the requirement for the US Forest Service (USFS) (at their request) to provide permission to a hunter prior to their application for a certificate of registration to place a bait station on their lands. The USFS will no longer provide written permission for this activity; and 2) make technical corrections as needed.
- CodeNo:
- R657-33
- CodeName:
- {36936|R657-33|R657-33. Taking Bear}
- Link Address:
- Natural ResourcesWildlife Resources1594 W NORTH TEMPLESALT LAKE CITY, UT 84116-3154
- Link Way:
Staci Coons, by phone at 801-538-4718, by FAX at 801-538-4709, or by Internet E-mail at stacicoons@utah.gov
- AdditionalInfo:
- More information about a Notice of Proposed Rule is available online. The Portable Document Format (PDF) version of the Bulletin is the official version. The PDF version of this issue is available at http://www.rules.utah.gov/publicat/bull-pdf/2016/b20160201.pdf. The HTML edition of the Bulletin is a convenience copy. Any discrepancy between the PDF version and HTML version is resolved in favor of the PDF version. Text to be deleted is struck through and surrounded by brackets ([example]). ...
- Related Chapter/Rule NO.: (1)
- R657-33. Taking Bear.