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News / Northwest

Farmers bump up harvest of problem elk north of Seattle

By Associated Press
Published: December 11, 2019, 8:06pm

MOUNT VERNON  — Northwest Washington landowners are harvesting elk at a faster pace than last year to reduce damage to farmland, a state Fish and Wildlife official said.

The Capital Press reported that since July 1, landowners or their hand-picked hunters have shot 22 elk, compared to 15 at this time last year. The uptick comes after Fish and Wildlife said it was OK for farmers to charge hunters a fee for coming onto their land to fill a kill permit.

Skagit County farmers have complained for years about elk-damaged fences, pastures and crops. The county assessor has estimated that elk do roughly $1.4 million worth of damage annually. Fish and Wildlife issues kill permits to farmers to scare elk away. The shootings are not intended to reduce the overall size of the region’s North Cascades elk herd.

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