Evidence of how glacially the wheels of government grind forward was made plain in recent days with the release of the Department of Natural Resources' most recent wolf management plan.
Begun in 2019 and intended to update the state's 2001 wolf plan, the most recent missive was eagerly awaited by a varied crowd of stakeholders, not least those most affected by Minnesota's growing gray wolf population, now estimated to number about 2,700.
Professional in tone and substance, the new plan accomplishes at least one of its goals: to document the sociology that surrounds management of Minnesota gray wolves.
Nearly everyone, it seems, has an opinion about wolves and how they should be managed, with the most vocal and politically strident among these contingents advising, and in some cases demanding, that wolves be neither hunted nor trapped.
The Center for Biological Diversity, headquartered in Tucson, Ariz., is at the head of this list.
But there are others, and the DNR's latest wolf plan acknowledges as much, saying, essentially, that as Minnesota becomes more urbanized and increasing numbers of people get their notions about wild critters from television and the internet, the Disneyesque practice of anthropomorphizing wildlife will become more widespread.
Word had leaked from the DNR a year or more ago that whatever the new wolf plan would say, it wouldn't be definitive on whether hunting and trapping should again be allowed in Minnesota.
Prompted by wolves' delisting from the Endangered Species Act, regulated seasons allowing hunting and trapping of wolves in Minnesota were held most recently in 2012-2014. The state's wolf population before and after the seasons was essentially unchanged, if not a little larger within a year or two afterward.