EMMITSBURG,
Md. – Recent public concerns over proposed plans by
the town to exterminate the beaver population at Rainbow Lake
and reports of shots fired from town property into private
land could spur legislation to establishing wildlife management
areas.
Although
town administrators said the town did not intend to continue
killing beavers, the board of commissioners took measures
to ensure that any similar proposal in the future would
first be brought before the commissioners.
However,
some feel that something more might need to be done about
hunting on town lands.
Hunters
may have fired into private land
Emmitsburg
permits licensed hunters, fishers and trappers to hunt on
town lands as long as they do so within state guidelines.
However,
town resident Catherine Forrence, who has horses on her
mother’s, Betsey Forrence, land outside of town, told
the board of commissioners July 17 that hunters shooting
on town land have fired into her mother’s property.
Forrence
said, “Last year we had problems with hunters on the
Scott Road property,” noting that the horses are kept
on land owned by Betsey Forrence next to Toms Creek.
Betsey
Forrence said the problem goes back “a couple of years”
beginning with an incident where hunters coming from town
property were pursuing a deer across Toms Creek.
Forrence
was in the process of creating a walking garden in that
area of her land. She said the hunters fired right into
where the proposed garden was underway. “It’s
very scary to me,” she said. “We now have horses
on the property.”
Catherine
Forrence said she had asked the town to produce a map with
safety zones designated, but “that has never happened.”
Commissioner
to consider wildlife management
Commissioner
William B. O’Neil Jr. told The Dispatch that he was
possibly interested in pursuing legislation to establish
a wildlife management area to protect wildlife and humans.
Beyond
simply preserving as much indigenous wildlife as necessary
to maintain a balanced ecology. O’Neil said, “I,
too, am alarmed to hear about hunting near rural residences.
Shooting over a creek to target a deer in someone's garden
clearly should not be tolerated. I like the idea of establishing
a best management practices guidelines, to include safety
zones for hunting.”
O’Neil
suggested that not all town lands would fall within any
proposed wildlife management rules, because that “would
include such things as the water / sewer treatment plants,
power substations, recreational fields, etc.”
He
said that a resolution calling for a moratorium on hunting
and trapping activities on town lands could be introduced
at the next session of the board of commissioners.
The
moratorium would be temporary, conditioned on the development
of an approved wildlife management plan that would include
acceptable hunting safety zones and assurances that indigenous
species would not be exterminated.
An
ordinance would likely follow at some point after the moratorium
is in place declaring certain portions of town lands as
wildlife management areas to be governed by best management
practices guidelines.