All wildlife species present management challenges, especially wolves and other large carnivores that sometimes prey on livestock, pets, and other animals. As the state's wolf population continues to grow, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) is actively working with livestock producers, hunters and others to minimize conflicts that may occur, recognizing that public acceptance is essential for wolf recovery to succeed on a statewide basis.
In 2013, WDFW created the Wolf Advisory Group (WAG) to provide a broad range of perspectives to help inform this ongoing management effort. Wolf Advisory Group meetings are open to the public and meeting minutes are made available after each meeting (see below under "Meeting calendar" drop-down menu). This group is tasked with recommending strategies for reducing conflicts with wolves outlined in the state's Wolf Conservation and Management Plan. Specific issues include:
- Encouraging livestock producers to take proactive, preventative measures to decrease the risk of loss.
- Providing compensation for economic loss due to wolf predation.
- Monitoring recovery of the wolf population and its effect on prey species.
- Providing information to the public on wolf recovery in Washington.
In 2017, WDFW and the Wolf Advisory Group developed the Wolf-Livestock Interaction Protocol (PDF) to guide efforts to reduce conflicts between wolves and livestock. The protocol prescribes proactive measures livestock producers can take to reduce the probability of wolf-livestock conflicts, and it establishes a framework for the department's response when conflicts between wolves and livestock do occur. It also serves to increase the transparency and accountability of the department's activities and management actions related to wolves. The Wolf-Livestock Interaction Protocol was published in June 2017 and amended in September 2020.
Questions about becoming a WAG member or the recruitment process? Check out the FAQ here. (PDF)
At the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, we celebrate diverse individuals who bring a wide range of perspectives. All are welcome to participate in our processes regardless of race, color, sex, age, national origin, religion, sexual orientation, gender identity and/or expression, status as a veteran, and basis of disability.
Contacts and member info
Members
Guidelines
Contacts
Subhadeep (Shubh) Bhattacharjee
Wolf and grizzly bear policy lead
Subhadeep.Bhattacharjee@dfw.wa.gov
Mission statement
The Wolf Advisory Group follows the principles of Conservation Conflict Transformation (CCT). To learn more, watch and listen to the following presentation:
- Building a Path to Peace, Conservation Conflict Transformation presentation (PDF) and audio
Mission of WAG
To promote equitable, inclusive, and respectful dialogue and decision-making among diverse people to foster durable peace by transforming the root causes of social conflict and providing high quality recommendations on wolf recovery, conservation, and management.
Vision
The Wolf Advisory Group (WAG) envisions a future for Washington whereby:
- People have equal and balanced voices in decisions that impact their communities
- Diverse perspectives are welcomed and heard
- Mutual understanding of the needs of diverse communities and groups is achieved and respected
- Wolves are an opportunity for shared, constructive problem-solving
- The deeper roots of social conflict in Washington are continually transformed
- Healthy, sustainable populations of wolves and wild ungulates are achieved and maintained in balance
- Livestock and financial losses to livestock producers are minimized
- Diverse communities, including rural communities, livestock producers, hunters, environmental communities, and the interested public, are kept whole (in terms of quality of life), vibrant, and resilient
- The best available science is used for decision-making on group recommendations
- Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, the Fish and Wildlife Commission, and the Washington legislature are provided creative, inclusive recommendations for effective decision-making
- Public dialogue and mutual learning around wolves, ungulates, and natural resource issues are significantly improved
- There is continual fostering of high-quality dialogue and decision-making around wolves and related or emerging issues now and into the future
Decision-making (on advice/recommendations) among WAG
WAG chose to use a sufficient consensus model for decision-making (on recommendations to WDFW or problem-solving efforts among WAG), defined by WAG as:
- Diverse views are fully and genuinely welcomed and considered
- The issues are sufficiently discussed and understood from all angles
- Absent members have an opportunity to provide input and be heard fully by all members
- No more than three individuals disagree with the decision and all three cannot be from the same side (same side or in-group distinctions, for the purposes of WAG, are environmentalists, livestock producers, and hunters. Where there is overlap in in-group identities, the member may self-identify and align with the group they feel the strongest connection)
- Once a decision is reached, it will be supported by the entire group, including those who opposed the decision
- Dissenting voices recognize that maintaining the long-term integrity of the process and relationships is more important than the decision and therefore will work outside WAG and within their own group or community to 1) uphold support for the decision within their community or group and 2) ask for their organization or group to "stand aside" and not take action to oppose or overturn the decision, even if they themselves did not secure their preferred decision
Meeting calendar
The link to log in to Wolf Advisory Group Public meetings is the same for all meetings:
https://www.zoomgov.com/j/1608951399?pwd=STRXU2wrb3NteXUvd3MvcWlObDEzQT09
Webinar ID: 160 895 1399
Passcode: 192311
One tap mobile: +16692545252,,1608951399#,,,,*192311#
Agendas will be available approximately one week prior to the next meeting.
Date | Location | Meeting materials |
---|---|---|
Oct. 28, 2025
Oct. 29, 2025
|
Ellensburg, WA |
Agenda to come |
July 15, 2025
July 16, 2025
|
Clarkston, WA |
Agenda to come |
April 22, 2025
April 23, 2025
|
Olympia, WA |
Agenda to come |
8:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m., Jan. 7, 2025
8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m., Jan. 8, 2025
|
Zoom Webinar—Public Link: Webinar ID: 160 895 1399 |
|
10 a.m. - 5:30 p.m., Nov. 19, 2024
9:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m., Nov. 20, 2024
|
Agriculture & Trade Center 317 W. Astor Ave, Colville WA 99114 |
|
July 16 through July 17, 2024
|
Sun Mountain Lodge, Winthrop |
|
April 23 through April 24, 2024
|
Olympia |
|
Jan. 9 through Jan. 10, 2024
|
Virtual |
|
Nov. 15 through Nov. 16, 2023
|
Ellensburg, WA |
|
June 27 through June 28, 2023
|
Clarkston (with virtual option) |
|
April 12 through April 13, 2023
|
Seattle (with virtual option) Recorded presentations:
|
|
Jan. 4 through Jan. 5, 2023
|
Goldendale (with virtual option) |
|
Nov. 2 through Nov. 3, 2022
|
Spokane Valley (with virtual option) |
|
June 22 through June 23, 2022
|
Moses Lake (with virtual option) |
|
April 26 through April 27, 2022
|
Zoom conference |
|
Jan. 6 through Jan. 7, 2022
|
Zoom conference |
|
Nov. 9 through Nov. 10, 2021
|
Zoom conference |
|
July 6 through July 7, 2021
|
Zoom conference |
|
10 a.m. - 12 p.m., April 26, 2021
|
Zoom conference |
Agenda to come |
April 7 through April 8, 2021
|
Zoom conference |
|
1 , - 5 p.m., Jan. 27, 2021
|
Microsoft Teams conference |
Agenda to come |
Jan. 6 through Jan. 7, 2021
|
Zoom conference |
|
1 , - 4 p.m., Dec. 2, 2020
|
Zoom conference |
Agenda to come |
Nov. 19 through Nov. 20, 2020
|
Zoom conference |
|
9 a.m. - 12 p.m., Oct. 21, 2020
|
Zoom conference |
Agenda to come |
Aug. 19, 2020
|
Conference call |
Agenda to come |
Aug. 5 through Aug. 6, 2020
|
Zoom conference |
|
May 18 through May 19, 2020
|
Zoom conference |
|
9 a.m. - 12 p.m., April 30, 2020
|
Zoom conference |
Agenda to come |
March 31 through April 1, 2020
|
Zoom conference |
|
Jan. 8 through Jan. 9, 2020
|
Olympia |
|
Nov. 20 through Nov. 21, 2019
|
Ellensburg |
|
Sept. 27, 2019
|
Conference call |
Agenda to come |
Aug. 27 through Aug. 28, 2019
|
Moses Lake |
|
June 27 through June 28, 2019
|
Ellensburg |
|
May 24, 2019
|
Conference call |
|
April 24 through April 25, 2019
|
Olympia |
|
Feb. 13, 2019
|
Conference call |
|
Feb. 12 through Feb. 13, 2019
|
Cancelled |
|
Dec. 11 through Dec. 12, 2018
|
Spokane
|
|
Nov. 8, 2018
|
Conference call |
|
July 31, 2018
|
Conference call |
|
July 10 through July 11, 2018
|
Ellensburg
|
|
May 1 through May 2, 2018
|
Spokane
|
|
March 21 through March 22, 2018
|
Ellensburg
|
|
March 29 through March 30, 2017
|
Olympia
|
|
Feb. 1 through Feb. 2, 2017
|
Olympia
|
|
Sept. 14 through Sept. 15, 2016
|
Issaquah
|
|
July 6 through July 7, 2016
|
Spokane Valley
|
|
May 10 through May 11, 2016
|
Ellensburg
|
|
April 27, 2016
|
Conference call |
Agenda to come |
March 14 through March 15, 2016
|
Olympia
|
|
Feb. 29, 2016
|
Conference call |
Agenda to come |
Feb. 2, 2016
|
Conference call |
Agenda to come |
Feb. 1 through Feb. 2, 2016
|
Cancelled
|
|
Dec. 13 through Dec. 14, 2015
|
Spokane
|
|
Nov. 11, 2015
|
Tour
|
Agenda to come |
Nov. 6, 2015
|
Conference call |
Agenda to come |
Sept. 30 through Oct. 1, 2015
|
Ellensburg
|
|
Sept. 3, 2015
|
Olympia
|
|
May 21 through May 22, 2015
|
Spokane
|
Agenda to come |
Sept. 25, 2014
|
Olympia
|
|
July 24, 2014
|
Ellensburg
|
|
May 21, 2014
|
Spokane
|
|
March 20, 2014
|
Olympia
|
|
Dec. 19, 2013
|
Ellensburg
|
|
Oct. 23, 2013
|
Ellensburg
|
|
Sept. 18, 2013
|
Olympia
|
|
Aug. 15, 2013
|
Spokane
|
|
July 10, 2013
|
Ellensburg
|