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Bear hunt stirs emotions for backers and detractors in Maryland

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The 376-pound bear that 12-year-old Colton Lucas killed had been menacing the town near the West Virginia border, turning over trash bins and making his way onto the porches of several homes to get to the bird feed. Colton was hailed as something of a local hero, and his father, Joe Lucas, who had never had taken part in the bear hunt after years of trying to get a tag, said “he created a memory in his own backyard.”

Harry Spiker, a bear biologist for the state Department of Natural Resources who manages the bear hunt, said the event is much different from deer hunting. Getting a permit for the bear hunt is viewed in the Maryland hunting community as “winning the lottery,” Spiker said. More than 4,000 applied for permits issued this year — also a record.

“If you draw a tag (for the bear hunt), you don’t know if you’re going to get one for another five or 10 years,” Spiker said.

A quota of between 80 and 100 bears killed has been set by the state to reduce a growing population of bears that, according to Spiker, has moved east — even into Maryland’s residential Montgomery and Prince George’s counties — in recent years.

Those who receive tags for the bear hunt are allowed to take up to two others with them, and Spiker said that often involves family members, because the hunt “is partly about building family camaraderie and having the opportunity to build that memory, if you will.”

But Lamp doesn’t think the bear hunt is about adding to the family scrapbook or the hunter’s house decor. Among the piles of letters and legal documents detailing Lamp’s unsuccessful fight to shut down the bear hunt is a Baltimore Sun clipping from 2004 about the opening day of the hunt.

In it, 8-year-old Sierra Stiles, who received one of the 192 permits given that year, told a reporter that she wanted to turn the dead animal “into a rug.”

That’s just the kind of statement Lamp said supports his argument for not allowing children under the age of 16 to be allowed to hunt.

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