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Author Topic: Hunting is down in the US. The Trump administration wants to change that  (Read 4899 times)

Offline Bob33

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Toy gun grasped firmly in his hand and a grin plastered wide across his face while he played "Big Buck Hunter Pro," Ryan Zinke could have been a kid at an arcade. But the Interior secretary and former congressman was actually in the department cafeteria showing off the arcade game installed to commemorate hunting season.

"To highlight #sportsmen contributions 2 conservation I installed Big Buck Hunter in the employee cafeteria. Get excited for #hunting season!" Zinke tweeted from his personal account Tuesday.
But Zinke is not toying around when it comes to his support of hunters and fishers.

Hunting in the United States is down. A US Fish and Wildlife Service survey released last week found that there are 2.2 million fewer hunters in America now than in 2011. And the new administration is poised to change that.

On his first day in office back in March, Zinke issued two orders, one which overturned a recent ban of lead ammunition and fish tackle on Fish and Wildlife Service lands and waters. Last week Zinke issued another secretarial order designed to increase access to various public lands for hunters and fishers.

Zinke's passion for expanding hunting rights on public lands is both personal and political. A Montanan, the secretary has been known to hunt in his spare time. During his short stint in Congress, he was a member of the Congressional Sportsmen's Foundation. He was spotted attending their annual dinner last Wednesday, a source told CNN, just two days before he issued the most recent secretarial order.

"What really kind of expedited this whole thing, was last week the US Fish and Wildlife put out a survey saying that hundreds of Americans were enjoying the outdoors, but within that survey they found that hunting was down," Heather Swift, Interior spokesperson said when asked about last week's secretarial order. "And the big thing that the secretary hears over and over again is that people just don't have access to land."

Politically Zinke also owes a lot to hunting, angler and conservation lobbyists who were largely responsible for supporting him for the position of Interior Secretary earlier this year. The issue was especially important to Donald Trump's son Don Jr., an avid hunter and active member of the Boone and Crocket Club, who helped with the search for Interior secretary.

"Mr. Zinke was the pick of the litter, not the best litter ever, but he was definitely the pick and that's why we advocated for him and that's why Jr. advocated for him as well," said Land Tawney, the president of the Montana-based Backcountry Hunters & Anglers, a non-profit sportsmen's organization.

Zinke and the Interior have recently made a big show of their support of hunting groups. In addition to the "Buck Hunter" game he gifted Interior employees, the department declared Thursday that October would be National Hunting and Fishing Month.

The declaration also generated the support of the National Rifle Association.
"Hunters, anglers, and target shooters are the best conservationists who contribute so much through the Pittman-Robertson and Dingell-Johnson Acts," said Richard Childress, NRA vice president. "Last year, they contributed $1.2 billion toward conservation and protecting our natural resources. We need more mentors taking young people out and teaching them to hunt and fish, so I'm glad Secretary Zinke is promoting hunting and fishing at the federal level."

But despite Zinke's clear efforts to woo hunters and anglers, not all of his decisions have gone over well with the conservationist-minded group. For example, Zinke's leaked recommendations to the White House to shrink the boundaries of national monuments and open up some of the land to the fossil fuel industry and loggers -- first reported Sunday by the Wall Street Journal -- were met with opposition and confusion.

"With what's leaked it's super troubling. Any reduction on these monuments is an attack on the Antiquities Act," said Tawney. "All monuments are at risk now. They can become political footballs in our eyes."

Conservationists who want to expand their access to hunting on public park lands and at monuments are as weary of opening up national park land to fossil fuel industries as environmentalists are, since both value sustaining the land as is.

"We can have all the access we want to a concrete parking lot, but that access doesn't mean anything if that fish and wildlife habitat isn't there," said Tawney.
Another pro-hunting group says what they are seeing within Interior is a fight between access and conservation.

"On the access front the department has been good. Access to our own public lands is a lot harder today than it ever has been, and that is in part introduced with the decline in hunting numbers we've seen," said Whit Fosburgh, president and CEO of the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership, a non-profit coalition of conservation organizations and outdoor related businesses.

"On the conservation side however, I think it's a much less rosy picture," Fosburgh said. "It's been a lot more about expanding development, opening up to oil and gas. There has been no proactive conservation vision espoused for our public lands."

Fosburgh said that the hunting community started getting "a little bit critical" of Zinke after he first announced the National Monument Review earlier this year. And he's skeptical of just how far the secretarial order will go.

"They use hunting and fishing for an excuse for our changes in monuments," he said. "All of the ones under review already allow hunting and fishing very clearly."

Fosberg's criticism is similar to what environmental groups said following the secretarial order last week.

"Don't be fooled: the Trump Administration is pretending to be granting hunting and fishing rights that are already guaranteed by law and policy," said a statement from the Center for American Progress, a left-leaning thing tank. "The real story is that, with this announcement, the Trump administration is trying to create a distraction from their plans to dramatically reduce the size of America's national monuments, which would be the largest elimination of protections on wildlife habitat in US history."

Nevertheless, Fosburgh said most pro-hunting and conservation minded groups are still hoping for the best with the Trump administration.

"We're very prepared, and we have been from day one. We supported his nomination and we are prepared to work with Secretary Zinke," he said. "We're not going to just say it's a lost cause in September of the first year of the administration."

http://www.cnn.com/2017/09/22/politics/hunters-ryan-zinke-interior/index.html#ampshare=http://www.cnn.com/2017/09/22/politics/hunters-ryan-zinke-interior/index.html
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Offline Fl0und3rz

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Re: Hunting is down in the US. The Trump administration wants to change that
« Reply #1 on: September 22, 2017, 07:30:13 PM »
Center for American Progress is not just a left-leaning think tank.  It is obama-clinton, top to bottom.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Center_for_American_Progress


Otherwise, this sounds promising, on its face.

Offline bracer40

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Re: Hunting is down in the US. The Trump administration wants to change that
« Reply #2 on: September 22, 2017, 09:34:15 PM »
Center for American Progress is not just a left-leaning think tank.  It is obama-clinton, top to bottom.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Center_for_American_Progress


Otherwise, this sounds promising, on its face.
"Obama-Clinton top to bottom"...what does that mean?
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Offline banishd

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Re: Hunting is down in the US. The Trump administration wants to change that
« Reply #3 on: September 22, 2017, 11:12:30 PM »
Sportsmen are being used by Zinke. I like the sound of what hes saying but what is really going on is opening public land for exploitation. most of the monuments are open in one way or another to hunting and fishing already. Backcountry Hunters & Anglers, who initially supported him, is now rallying against his agenda. I trust BHA and Field and Stream more than some sweet talking politician.

Offline Fl0und3rz

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Re: Hunting is down in the US. The Trump administration wants to change that
« Reply #4 on: September 23, 2017, 02:23:23 AM »
Center for American Progress is not just a left-leaning think tank.  It is obama-clinton, top to bottom.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Center_for_American_Progress


Otherwise, this sounds promising, on its face.
"Obama-Clinton top to bottom"...what does that mean?

Within the context of the OP, I would not expect a fair treatment of the facts and consequences of the policies and decisions.  CNN presents that as some sort of alternative viewpoint, without specifying that it is a highly biased viewpoint.

I would not expect CAP to have sportsmen's and sportwomen's interest in mind, especially when eliminating the 2A was a talking point of the clinton campaign.

Otherwise, CAP was founded by hillary's campaign chairman, who also was a staffer/advisor/? for obama.  It is staffed by many hillary loyalists and people who worked in the campaign and/or foundation, IIRC.

I don't want to turn the thread political.  I just want to note for the unaware that CAP is no friend to sportsmen and sportwomen.

Offline bigtex

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Re: Hunting is down in the US. The Trump administration wants to change that
« Reply #5 on: September 23, 2017, 08:32:53 AM »
Sportsmen are being used by Zinke. I like the sound of what hes saying but what is really going on is opening public land for exploitation. most of the monuments are open in one way or another to hunting and fishing already. Backcountry Hunters & Anglers, who initially supported him, is now rallying against his agenda. I trust BHA and Field and Stream more than some sweet talking politician.
:yeah:

Offline bigtex

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Re: Hunting is down in the US. The Trump administration wants to change that
« Reply #6 on: September 23, 2017, 08:37:11 AM »
Zinke can talk about increasing hunting and fishing numbers all he wants but it's really more of a state's issue. States dictate the seasons, the limits, the license costs, etc. Those are the things that are driving people from the sport.

Zinke simply wants to open more wildlife refuges to hunting/fishing as a way to increase opportunity, well in WA most refuges are open anyways so we won't see much of a change there. All of the National Monuments in WA are open to hunting. We have three National Park Service sites (Lake Roosevelt, Lake Chelan, and Ross Lake) open to hunting, that's more than every state other than Alaska.

Offline Elkaholic daWg

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Re: Hunting is down in the US. The Trump administration wants to change that
« Reply #7 on: September 23, 2017, 09:51:34 AM »
So no dog in the fight.....What about Oregon, Utah?
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Offline bigtex

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Re: Hunting is down in the US. The Trump administration wants to change that
« Reply #8 on: September 23, 2017, 10:20:32 AM »
So no dog in the fight.....What about Oregon, Utah?
There's three wildlife refuges in UT and you can hunt all of them. There's one NPS Nat'l Rec Area, it's open to fishing but not hunting. Then of course all the BLM and USFS land is open to hunting, including the monuments.

Oregon's refuges on the westside are mostly urban, but even with that nearly all are open to hunting. The ones on the eastside are open to hunting. Congress expanded the NPS Oregon Caves National Monument into a Monument and Preserve a few years ago, you can now hunt the preserve part of the monument.

In reality this is more of a "feel good" directive then anything else.  :twocents:

Offline Fl0und3rz

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Re: Hunting is down in the US. The Trump administration wants to change that
« Reply #9 on: September 23, 2017, 10:34:53 AM »
Thanks for the no BS perspective.

Offline Bob33

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Re: Hunting is down in the US. The Trump administration wants to change that
« Reply #10 on: September 23, 2017, 10:35:45 AM »
So no dog in the fight.....What about Oregon, Utah?
There's three wildlife refuges in UT and you can hunt all of them. There's one NPS Nat'l Rec Area, it's open to fishing but not hunting. Then of course all the BLM and USFS land is open to hunting, including the monuments.

Oregon's refuges on the westside are mostly urban, but even with that nearly all are open to hunting. The ones on the eastside are open to hunting. Congress expanded the NPS Oregon Caves National Monument into a Monument and Preserve a few years ago, you can now hunt the preserve part of the monument.

In reality this is more of a "feel good" directive then anything else.  :twocents:
I'd rather "feel good" about an administration that supports hunting than feeling bad about one that doesn't.
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Offline JimmyHoffa

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Re: Hunting is down in the US. The Trump administration wants to change that
« Reply #11 on: September 23, 2017, 11:03:31 AM »
So no dog in the fight.....What about Oregon, Utah?
There's three wildlife refuges in UT and you can hunt all of them. There's one NPS Nat'l Rec Area, it's open to fishing but not hunting. Then of course all the BLM and USFS land is open to hunting, including the monuments.

Oregon's refuges on the westside are mostly urban, but even with that nearly all are open to hunting. The ones on the eastside are open to hunting. Congress expanded the NPS Oregon Caves National Monument into a Monument and Preserve a few years ago, you can now hunt the preserve part of the monument.

In reality this is more of a "feel good" directive then anything else.  :twocents:
I'd rather "feel good" about an administration that supports hunting than feeling bad about one that doesn't.
:yeah:  after Obama and Jewell, I'll take Zinke any day.

Offline bearpaw

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Re: Hunting is down in the US. The Trump administration wants to change that
« Reply #12 on: September 23, 2017, 11:08:04 AM »
Some monuments are closed to hunting, I think this will be a big step for large areas shut down in Alaska. Also, there will likely be more logging again, that will bolster herds and reduce forest fire danger in areas that have over mature forests, which is likely one reason why BHA is now opposed to Zinke, BHA is often opposed to multiple land use, logging, mining, oil, gas, etc. This country needs to use our resources that's what made us great once and that's what can make us great again.  :twocents:
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Offline bigtex

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Re: Hunting is down in the US. The Trump administration wants to change that
« Reply #13 on: September 23, 2017, 11:15:05 AM »
Some monuments are closed to hunting, I think this will be a big step for large areas shut down in Alaska.
The only monuments closed to hunting are those under the National Park Service. Monuments managed by BLM, USFS, or USFWS are open to hunting. A large majority of NPS monuments are small, historical, and even urban. Compared to those managed by the other agencies which are what most public lands consist of (nature, rural, etc.)

Offline olyguy79

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Re: Hunting is down in the US. The Trump administration wants to change that
« Reply #14 on: September 23, 2017, 11:19:23 AM »
Zinke can talk about increasing hunting and fishing numbers all he wants but it's really more of a state's issue. States dictate the seasons, the limits, the license costs, etc. Those are the things that are driving people from the sport.

Zinke simply wants to open more wildlife refuges to hunting/fishing as a way to increase opportunity, well in WA most refuges are open anyways so we won't see much of a change there. All of the National Monuments in WA are open to hunting. We have three National Park Service sites (Lake Roosevelt, Lake Chelan, and Ross Lake) open to hunting, that's more than every state other than Alaska.
:yeah:

The feds really don't have that much authority over hunting, it's the states. You obviously have exceptions such as migratory birds, and endangered species act. But your typical big game, upland game bird, etc is mainly a states issue. It's actually written into federal law that on USFS and BLM land the state is to be the lead on wildlife management and hunting, the feds can only assist.

If the feds want to increase opportunity how about acquiring lands to prevent development and the loss of opportunity? A lot of the areas I hunted when I was a kid is now buildings or houses.  :twocents:

 


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