Originally Posted by
ratagonia
The recent article seems to be drawn from the complaint, and may take some liberties with the facts. Had this previous "attack" been mentioned earlier? A bear moseyed into the campground, nuzzled some coolers and put his paw on a tent. This becomes "Attacked another group of campers"? I would call that "taking liberties with the facts". You may recall that these activities took place in the woods, a place where bears live.
If they had camped in the campground, then maybe there was a duty. Maybe the rangers were engaged in bear-monitoring activity at the campground, but did not extend it to where the family was camped, 2 miles away. Did that "previous attack" take place at the SAME place the family was camped? If the FS closed the campground, would the family have just camped up the road anyway?
Seems like there is a whole lot of gesticulation, and not a whole lot of facts. A lot of interpretations, not a lot of stating what actually happened. That is one thing that attorneys do, especially when their case is weak. "How can we pitch this for maximum sympathy?"
Yellowstone and Montana have a long history and continuing problem with bears in campgrounds, and have a plan in place for dealing with them. AF/Timp has no history of significant problems with bears, and therefore did not have a plan in place. One bear sighting, or one incident of a bear nosing through campsite food, does not a bear problem make.
They changed the policy because they now have a history of bear problems, and it would be irresponsible to not come up with a plan deal with it.
Did you mean this as sarcasm, Summit? "A SMALL CHILD IS EATEN ALIVE IN FRONT OF HIS FAMILY!" is a wonderful propoganda phrase, but not consistent with the facts as reported. Perhaps you have a future in politics, or yellow journalism, Summit. Or perhaps as a lawyer? :cool2:
Tom :moses: