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HB 24-1375

signed

Wild Carnivores & Livestock Nonlethal Coexistence

Plain-English Summary

AI-generated

House Bill 24-1375, known as the "Wild Carnivores and Livestock Nonlethal Coexistence" bill, aims to reduce conflicts between wild carnivores like wolves and livestock by requiring farmers to use non-lethal methods to protect their animals. If a farmer doesn't properly dispose of dead livestock or fails to employ these protective measures, they won’t be eligible for compensation when their animals are killed by predators. The bill also restricts compensation specifically to trained livestock guardian dogs that are actively working and excludes other types of guard animals. It mandates the creation of conflict prevention plans and hires officers to help farmers implement non-lethal strategies. Since it has been signed, these measures are now in effect and aim to promote coexistence between wildlife and livestock owners in Colorado.

Official Summary

Current law authorizes a livestock owner (owner) to be compensated when a game animal or a gray wolf kills livestock, a livestock guard, or a herding animal. To receive compensation for native carnivore depredation under current law, the bill requires the owner to: Employ nonlethal coexistence strategies; and Appropriately dispose of a livestock carcass in a manner that makes the livestock carcass inedible for native carnivores. If an owner fails to appropriately dispose of a livestock carcass in violation of the bill and this failure results in depredation, the division of parks and wildlife (division) may not issue a permit to kill the native carnivore. For the purposes of receiving compensation under current law, the bill also changes the definition of a working animal from "livestock guard or herding animal" to "livestock guardian dog", and the effect of this change is to stop compensation for herding animals and guard animals that are not dogs. In addition, the livestock guardian dog must be trained and working when depredated. When native carnivores establish a presence in an area, the parks and wildlife commission must create a conflict prevention plan, which must include appropriate nonlethal measures. The bill sets standards for the plan. Then, the division must coordinate with and educate owners within the area to implement proactive nonlethal coexistence strategies. The division will hire native-carnivore coexistence officers to implement the bill. The division must keep records of the claims and their disposition and issue a report to the relevant legislative committees. The division and the department of agriculture must coordinate and cooperate with each other to implement the bill. The division may seek and expend gifts, grants, and donations for native-carnivore nonlethal coexistence. (Note: This summary applies to this bill as introduced.)

Details

Chamber
House
First action
2024-04-01
Latest action
2024-03-13
Last action desc.
Introduced In House - Assigned to Agriculture, Water & Natural Resources
OpenStates
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