Oregon Fish & Wildlife Commission Meeting May 3, 2024

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www.dfw.state.or.us/agency/co...

Пікірлер: 3

  • @BeautifuLakesStreamsBiologists
    @BeautifuLakesStreamsBiologistsАй бұрын

    Of your pool of candidates, you have one clear choice to lead this agency out of the realm of ineffectual bureaucracy. That would be Debbie Colbert. She is the only candidate that has demonstrated the grasp of science required to affect positive outcomes for all stake holders. We work on the leading edge of habitat design which requires continual innovation and a blind eye towards the status quo. Debbie Colbert's background will provide scientific leadership instead of the continual gyre of much of public administration. Slicing through to results matters in the real world , especially the natural world.

  • @nancymachugh230

    @nancymachugh230

    24 күн бұрын

    May 10 2024

  • @mott7749

    @mott7749

    23 күн бұрын

    If Oregon was an apple tree, our land is the tree and our wildlife as individuals are the apples… one side may step forward, look closely, and put importance on the health of each individual apple. And want to protect each apples life at all cost. Where another side may step back, look at the whole tree, and realize that if the tree is healthy it will continue to produce fresh apples each year. A landscape manager looks after the tree for the benefit of the public. The current North American model of wildlife conservation looks after the tree for the benefit of all who want to experience the tree. Whether they want a few apples to make a pie or they just want to find a shady spot under the tree to sit and relax. PLEASE I BEG YOU, to look at the world and Oregon as a tree. Producing apples for ants, deer, and humans alike. And turn your attention to the health of the tree. Have faith in the tree. Because it works. And it has worked for a long long time. Wildlife management is and should be fluid. Things change. But nature works if we work to conserve it. NATURE WORKS.

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