I say, they ought to increase the hunting quotas on boars nonetheless. If the meat is unsuitable, surely the pelts could be sufficiently sanitised for use and decoration?
Hunting as a sport is a growing activity again, and there is quite simply not enough game hunting teams to go around. Not to mention, one must start somewhere. Boars seem rather ideal as a supplement to deer and elk in the game-stockpile. I know that I would not turn down a boar-hunt.
If nothing else, it ought to be perfectly legal for a land-owner to shoot invasive boars playing at coal miners on their property.
(To air some of my prejudices again, I believe that one opposition towards broader boar hunting would be fielded primarily by city-dwellers, who see the cute, fuzzy, striped little piglets on the television, and will consider any hunting measures against them as a form of genocide. Perhaps if they migrate into the suburbs, and do their porcine magic on a couple of flower-beds, there will be a slight shift.)
Yeah, the contamination is still from the Chernobyl incident, over 30 years ago. The wind spread a big cloud of radioactive dust over the north of Sweden.
Amusing fact: the first sign in the Western world that something had gone quite awry in the Soviet Empire was when particles from Tjernobyl triggered radiation alerts at the Forsmark NPP, Sweden. After some brief panicking, it was discovered that the radio-active particles had arrived externally from the east.
It was not nearly as cataclysmic as it was feared, however. Quite managable, as far as severe atomic disasters are concerned. There might still be spots in the heavily affected areas where one would be well advised to not eat large amounts of mushrooms, provided they can catch any before they scatter and run.