Legal resources We have reached out to or them to us…

In Washington by TwowolvesLeave a Comment

Help Stop The Profanity Peak Pack Slaughter

To Keep all in the Loop, Our Recent efforts include Reaching out or have reached out to us

We have reached out to Mary Wood, Mary Christina Wood is the Philip H. Knight Professor of Law and Faculty Director of the school’s Environmental and Natural Resources Law Center. She teaches property law, natural resources law, public trust law, and federal Indian law; she has also taught public lands law, wildlife law, and hazardous waste law.
 
She is the Founding Director of the school’s nationally acclaimed Environmental and Natural Resources Law Center and is Faculty Leader of the Program’s Conservation Trust Project, Sustainable Land Use Project, Native Environmental Sovereignty Project.
Further Nick from Cascadia in Eugene Oregon Called us yesterday,Nick Cady, Legal Director
Nick grew up in St. Louis, playing in the rivers of the Missouri Ozarks. He attended Truman State University where he received degrees in political and environmental science. Nick then traveled west to attend law school at the University of Oregon. When he is not litigating over irresponsible land management and protections for imperiled species, he can be found paddling, howling at the moon, or playing soccer. as well as Greta Anderson, Western Watersheds Project’s Interim Executive Director. Greta’s experiences ranged from working as a conservation advocate for environmental non-profit organizations, to serving as a field contract botanist for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Park Service. She is an author of numerous reports and publications on the impact of livestock grazing, riparian restoration and rare plants in both the United States and Mexico.
 
Greta serves as Conservation Chair for the Tucson Chapter of the Arizona Native Plant Society and is a committee member of the National Public Lands Grazing Campaign and a member of the Sierra Club National Public Lands Grazing Committee.
 
She has an M.A. in geography from the University of Arizona and a Water Policy Certificate from the same institution. She has a B.A. in environmental studies from Prescott College, and a certification of clinical herbalism from the Southwest School of Botanical Medicine.
 
She lives in Tucson and is an enthusiastic bicyclist, raises chickens, and loves to cook with her solar oven.
 
Zach Strong from NRDC emailed us yesterday, Zach Strong uncoverd the ugly truth to states wolf population management plans. He explains their goals such as increasing bag limits from 1-5, allowing the use of electronic calls to sound like crying pups, and many other unethical practices. With these ‘management plans’ that are supposed to be sustaining Gray Wolf populations, they are really just hunting them back to endangerment and possible extinction.

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