Benefits of Expanded Sunday Hunting in Pennsylvania - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Benefits of Expanded Sunday Hunting in Pennsylvania

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Title: Benefits of Expanded Sunday Hunting in Pennsylvania


1
Benefits of Expanded Sunday Hunting in
Pennsylvania
  • MARCH 2008
  • Robert B. Miller, Jr.

2
Chelsea Myers
3
Ben Adams
4
Bob Schlemmer
5
PAs Hunting Heritage is Eroding
  • General license sales declined 28 (1981-2006)
  • Were not alone this is a national trend
  • Future projections are alarming
  • Young and old alike cite time as a major
    constraint
  • The erosion of our hunting heritage will be felt
    by farmers, our economy and within our wildlife
    agency

6
Not Enough Time
  • We have an opportunity to give hunters more time
    by simply doing away with an Old Blue Law
  • The ban on Sunday fishing was lifted in 1937
  • Full weekend hunting would have multiple benefits

7
Opponents of Sunday Hunting
  • Outdoor enthusiasts might be put in harms way
  • Many hunters fear losing access to private land
    due to posting
  • Religious considerations

8
Proponents of Sunday Hunting
  • No other activities restricted on Sunday
  • Sporting events
  • take place on Sunday
  • 39 STATES ALLOW Sunday hunting

9
(No Transcript)
10
HOUSE BILL 779
  • Representative Ed Staback
  • Lackawanna County

11
(No Transcript)
12
New Yorks Sunday Hunting Experience
  • 1938 Sunday hunting BANNED in central and
    western regions
  • 1993 - Sunday hunting LEGALIZED in central region
    (3-yr trial)
  • 1996 - Sunday hunting LEGALIZED in western
    region (3-yr trial)
  • Today - Sunday hunting continues to be a POSITIVE
    EXPERIENCE for New York

13
Ohios Sunday Hunting Experience
  • Prior to 1998, Sunday hunting confined to
    waterfowl, coyote and groundhog
  • 1998 - Sunday hunting became LEGAL in Ohio and
    they have experienced POSITIVE OUTCOMES

14
Marylands Sunday Hunting Experience
  • 2003 - legislation passed to ALLOW Sunday hunting
    on private land with written permission of
    landowner
  • Deer may be hunted on 1st Sunday of archery
    season and 1st Sunday of firearms season (urban
    areas not included)
  • POSITIVE EXPERIENCE

15
West Virginias Sunday Hunting Experience
  • 2001 - Legislation was enacted to PERMIT Sunday
    hunting on private land with written permission
    of landowner
  • WV did not have to increase ranks of law
    enforcement and NO OVERTIME was needed
  • Several BENEFICIAL OUTCOMES have been noticed

16
NRA Report
  • None of these states have experienced the
    horror stories forecast by opponents of hunting.
    The states continue to have healthy wildlife
    populations. Hunters continue to behave in a
    responsible and safe manner. Church attendance
    remains unchanged. Landowner-hunter conflicts
    have not increased.
  • In sum, Sunday hunting has had nothing but a
    beneficial impact on these states and the future
    of hunting in them.

17
LegislativeBudget and Finance Committee

Four states bordering Pennsylvania - Maryland,
New York, Ohio, and West Virginia have recently
expanded Sunday hunting. In none of these states
does expanded Sunday hunting appear to have
caused significant difficulties.
18
The Decline of Hunting
  • Total annual sales of general hunting licenses
    have DECLINED 28
  • This trend ISNT CONFINED TO PENNSYLVANIA
  • This trend ISNT EXPECTED TO STOP
  • Youth participation in hunting is DECLINING
  • In Pennsylvania, recruitment rates are ALARMING

19
According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
  • Throughout the decade of the nineties there was
    a downturn in fishing and hunting participation
    that concerned many natural resource managers and
    organizations interested in the future of these
    activities. Data from the 1991, 1996, 2001 and
    2006 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting and
    Wildlife-Associated Recreation revealed that the
    declines in participation were attributable to
    both declining recruitment and retention.
  •  The percent of 13 to 19 year-olds who had ever
    hunted fell from 16 percent in 1990 to 11 percent
    in 2005.

20
Social Considerations
  • Hunting and fishing are primarily activities
    which can best be understood as a sociological
    phenomenon centered on and about the American
    family.
  • -- Responsive
  • Management

21
Implications of Aging Population
  • Nearly ALL YOUTH are initiated into hunting and
    fishing by an adult
  • Hunters age 35-54 represent 45.8 of U.S. hunting
    population, the teaching class
  • The next group of hunters age 25-34 is 25
    smaller than current teaching class

22
Time Constraints
  • To Be Succinct .

WERE FOR TIME!
SQUEEZED
23
When AskedWhy They Didnt Hunt In 2001
  • 44 of Probable Hunters said
  • NOT ENOUGH TIME
  • Those who are most likely to have children (age
    25-54) said
  • NOT ENOUGH TIME
  • 50 of Young Hunters said
  • NOT ENOUGH TIME

24
Sunday Hunting
  • 38 percent of PAs hunters said theyd hunt more
    or hunt again if MORE OPPORTUNITIES existed on
    Sunday
  • For individuals who could dedicate an entire
    weekend to hunting, providing them with another
    weekend day would DOUBLE THEIR TIME AFIELD
    annually

25
Economics of Hunting
  • Expenditures of 1.7 BILLION in 2006
  • PA ranks SECOND for hunting-related spending
  • PA hunters spend 16 million days in the woods,
    MORE THAN HUNTERS ANYWHERE IN U.S.
  • And they spent, on average, OVER 1,700

26
Economic Benefits of Sunday Hunting
  • Hunters would HUNT MORE
  • Hunters would SPEND MORE
  • Increased hunting activity would create
  • NEW JOBS and NEW TAX REVENUE

27
Economic Benefits of Sunday Hunting
  • Typical hunter in favor of Sunday hunting would
    dedicate 47 MORE TIME to hunting
  • 12 of our resident hunters hunted in ANOTHER
    STATE in 2004. When asked why, 1/3 replied, I
    COULD HUNT ON SUNDAY
  • Were 4TH IN THE NATION in terms of
  • non-resident hunters

28
More From theLegislative Budget and Finance
Report
  • Hunters who FAVOR Sunday hunting tend to be
    younger (46) than those who oppose (51)
  • About HALF of the hunters surveyed live with
    minors
  • Of these, over 53 said minors WOULD HUNT MORE

29
Agricultural Considerations
  • Farmers have VESTED INTEREST in seeing ranks of
    hunters remain strong due to
  • Crop Damage - approximately 75 million
  • Crop loss per farm averages 9,000
  • Forest productivity losses - 73 million

30
Agricultural Considerations
  • Despite these losses, PAs farmers and landowners
    have reservations about Sunday hunting
  • Major concerns of farmers
  • and landowners
  • Privacy
  • Religion
  • Trespassing
  • Choice to post
  • Sunday Hunting
  • by Permission

31
Gun Hunting Safety
  • Some believe Sunday hunting is unsafe
  • Sunday hunting ALREADY ALREADY TAKES PLACE in
    Pennsylvania
  • Sunday hunting in 39 other states HAS NOT been
    proven dangerous
  • According to National Safety Council, accidental
    firearm-related injuries and fatalities are DOWN

32
Safe Hunting
  • Hunting is SAFE
  • PA Game Commission says 2006 was safest hunting
    year in more than 90 years
  • Hunting ranks 29th for injuries
  • FEW other sports can match hunting for safety and
    safety education

33
Conclusions
  • FOLLOW the example set by other states
  • Todays hunters dont have as much time
  • Sundays may HELP KIDS ADULTS stay engaged
  • HELP HEAL our lost connectedness to nature

34
Last Child in the WoodsSaving Our Children from
Nature Deficit Disorder
baby boomers Americans born between 1946 and
1964 may constitute the last generation of
Americans to share an intimate, familial
attachment to the land and water.
--Richard Louv
35
Final Thought
I would urge every parent make memories with
your kids in nature. They will scarce remember
the hours you spent with them in front of the TV.
But theyll hold onto, very deeply, the moments
you spend with them in nature and theyll hold
onto those moments for a lifetime.

-- Larry Schweiger,

President/CEO, Natl Wildlife Federation
36
For more information contact
  • Robert B. Miller, Jr.
  • Governors Advisory Council for Hunting, Fishing
    and Conservation
  • 7th Floor, RCSOB
  • PO Box 8767
  • Harrisburg, PA 17105-8767
  • 717-772-4285
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