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U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and partners conducting grizzly hazing operations on Togwotee Pass, public asked to avoid area

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As a result of continued harassment by wildlife viewers creating unsafe conditions on Togwotee Pass in Wyoming, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and partners plan to conduct targeted hazing operations on grizzly bear 863. The Service and partners ask the public to avoid the area if possible and not interfere with these management operations, currently planned for the remainder of June 2021. Allowing wildlife experts to address this issue uninterrupted will increase the chances of this management tactic being successful. 

This operation will be conducted alongside partners at the U.S. Forest Service, Yellowstone National Park, Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming Highway Patrol, and Wyoming Game & Fish Department. Approaching, disturbing, or feeding bears –  as is occurring on Togwotee Pass –  is extremely dangerous to both humans and bears. These actions habituate animals to human development and can lead to dangerous human conditioned behavior. When this happens, bears may become aggressive and threaten human safety. If hazing does not resolve conflicts on Togwotee Pass, escalating management options include relocation and possibly euthanasia. By avoiding approaching or feeding bears, the public can help ensure that the need for such significant management options is unnecessary.

A female grizzly bear, known as “863” by wildlife managers and “Felicia” by public observers, and her two cubs have become habituated to the roadside along Highway 26/287. As more people become aware of these bears and stop to approach them, it creates unsafe conditions for people and wildlife. The public’s help is needed to ensure the continued safety of these bears and people passing through the area. 

The Service and our partners continue to raise calls to the public to stay safe and help keep grizzly bears wild. The Service again reminds residents and visitors that approaching, feeding, or otherwise disturbing grizzly bears poses a significant threat to humans and bears, in addition to being a federal offense under the Endangered Species Act. 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Forest Service, National Park Service, Wyoming Highway Patrol, Wyoming Game & Fish Department, and other partners are unified in their approach and committed to ensuring safe conditions for people and wildlife. To achieve this goal, they need the public’s help. Please remember to: 

— Never approach bears; always remain at least 100 yards (300 feet) away, or about the length of a football field 

— Practice ethical wildlife viewing by remaining a safe distance and never disturbing natural behaviors – if an animal notices you and/or changes their behavior or actions, you are too close 

— Never feed, leave food for, or make food accessible to bears  

— Obey traffic signs, laws, and regulations – stop only in designated pull-off areas 

— Follow the direction of wildlife management officials, do not interfere with or approach hazing operations 

Additional grizzly bear safety information is available from the Interagency Grizzly Bear Committee for residents, hunters, hikers/campers, farmers/ranchers, and wildlife watchers.

6 Comments

6 Comments

  1. Avatar photo

    Lyn Pollard

    June 12, 2021 at 3:59 pm

    Not being familiar with the area, I am taking a chance at suggesting the following: would it be possible to supervise the bears, and when they approach the highway,have that section closed or at least forced into continuous travel by flaggers? If the bears receive no rewards from travelers, and the travelers receive no payoffs by feeding or photographing them, then the cycle has a chance to break…

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    Nancy Cain

    June 12, 2021 at 4:20 pm

    Can’t believe that I am the first. I am greatly disappointed with handling of this situation. This bear is a road side bear when she has cubs, we all know that and so should bear management. Instead of having a patrol in the area once she came out with her coys, they should have beefed up the law enforcement in that area so a problem would not happen. Placing cones, signage will not stop people from stopping for a photo op! We all know that most people think the rule don’t apply to them therefore law enforcement is needed. If law enforcement isn’t big enough to handle the situation maybe a bear brigade can be formed to help with traffic. I am from Montana but would volunteer time to help out and I know there are others. Let’s work together to save this family, not destroy it! Give this grizzly a chance to raise her beautiful babies! Thank you for listening and if you have any questions please contact me at my email address. Thank you.

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      James Sargent

      June 15, 2021 at 9:02 am

      I agree people should be held more accountable for tbier own actions instead of blaming the bears !

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    Maya Karayiannis

    June 12, 2021 at 4:39 pm

    Human activity needs to be managed. The bears are bears and Felicia is just living her life raising her cubs. Hazing will most probably stress her even more- just like last year that caused separation from her cub. If people do not learn, why do you expect this from bears?

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    Mike Felton

    June 13, 2021 at 11:09 am

    Start enforcing the LAW of not stopping on roadways other than designated pull offs and write tickets.

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      James Sargent

      June 15, 2021 at 9:11 am

      Absolutely. I cannot put it into words how much I am appalled and disgusted that anyone would even consider hurting this beautiful family in any way

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