DUSD Officials Urge Caution After Mountain Lion Reports

Mountain Lion

Submitted by Denair Unified School District

Updated 10/06/14 at 10:10 am

School officials in Denair reminded students, parents, staff and community members to exercise caution after more unconfirmed sightings of a mountain lion over the weekend.

Stanislaus County sheriff’s deputies were called Friday night to the Country Squire Estates mobile home park on Waring Road after a resident there reported seeing a mountain lion. The park is about a mile west of the Denair High football stadium. There was no game there Friday night.

Deputies did not find evidence of the cat near the mobile home park, nor after two other unconfirmed reports Friday and Saturday.

On Thursday morning, a mountain lion paw print was discovered more than a mile south of the Denair campus complex. There was another unconfirmed sighting on Sept. 30 on the northern edge of Denair and multiple confirmed reports of a mountain lion in and around Turlock since Sept. 21.

Aaron Rosander, superintendent of the Denair Unified School District, recorded phone messages to parents and guardians that were sent Wednesday and Thursday in English and Spanish. In addition to the recorded messages, teachers discussed safety tips in class Thursday and elementary students were told to stay on the blacktop during recess and while teachers and aides stayed on the perimeter. Two-page flyers were sent home with about 1,250 students later that day.

Rosander and his staff remain in daily contact with the Sheriff’s Department and state Department of Fish and Game.

School officials, in consultation with the DFG, issued these suggestions to residents:

  • Keep an eye on small children
  • Have students walked in groups to and from school or, better yet, be dropped off or picked up by private vehicle or school bus
  • Don’t allow pets outside when mountain lions are most active (dawn, dusk and night)

Fish and Game officials are not sure if the recent reports all are about the same mountain lion, which are known to have territories of up to 100 square miles. There have been no attacks on animals or people reported in Stanislaus County.

Law enforcement and Fish and Game officials shared these facts and tips about mountain lions:

  • They are quiet, solitary and elusive, and typically avoid people
  • They are most active at dawn, dusk and night
  • They prefer deer but, if allowed, will feed on pets and livestock. In rare cases, they have attacked people.
  • People should not approach a lion
  • In confronted, don’t run. Make noise, stand tall and try to look bigger by raising your arms. If available, throw rocks or other objects at the animal.
  • If attacked, fight back
  • Avoid walking or jogging alone before sunrise or after sunset

Anyone who sees a mountain lion is asked to call 911.

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