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Hunting Facts

"Encouragement of a proper
hunting spirit, a proper love of sport, instead of being
incompatible with a love of nature and wild things, offers the
best guaranty for the preservation of wild things."
--Theodore
Roosevelt, U.S.
President,......
Nobel Peace Prize Winner, NRA Life Member
Hunting Benefits
Wildlife & Society
Often camouflaged from the public eye, the efforts
of hunters as conservationists over the last century have restored
America's game populations and enhanced the habitat of numerous
wildlife species. No other group has come close to sportsmen in
contributing the volunteer hours and funding necessary to make such
an impact on wildlife conservation.
President Theodore Roosevelt, arguably America's
first prominent conservationist, knew first hand of the advantages
regulated hunting and conservation bring to wildlife. During the late
1800s, Roosevelt saw animal numbers deteriorate because of
over-hunting driven by unregulated meat and fur markets. As
President, Roosevelt began creating programs aimed at restoring game
populations to healthy levels.
Hunting is an integral part of the fabric of our
economy and cultural heritage and it is also an important wildlife
management tool. Everyone benefits from the excise taxes that hunters
voluntarily pay on guns, ammunition and outdoor equipment. Since
1937, hunters have contributed over 4 billion dollars through the
Pittman-Robertson Act for the benefit of all wildlife species. These
dollars have been used to purchase millions of acres of public
lands.
Through over 10,000 clubs and organizations such
as NRA, Ducks Unlimited, Safari Club International, National Wild
Turkey Federation, Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation and Quail Unlimited,
sportsmen contribute an additional $300 million each year to wildlife
conservation activities.
Hunters and fishermen fund nearly 75% of the
annual income for all 50 state conservation agencies. Through license
fees and excise taxes on arms and gear, sportsmen contribute $200
million per year for wildlife conservation. (U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service)
Hunting Is A Vital Part Of American
Culture
- Hunting is an important and traditional
recreational activity in which 20,000,000 Americans 16 years old
and older participate.
- Hunters have been and continue to be among the
foremost supporters of sound wildlife management and conservation
practices in the United States.
- Hunters and organizations related to hunting
provide direct assistance to wildlife managers and enforcement
officers at all levels of government.
- Hunting is an essential component of effective
wildlife management, in that it tends to reduce conflicts between
people and wildlife and provides incentives for the conservation
of wildlife habitats and ecosystems on which wildlife depends.
Through legislative programs designed to channel funds back into
the conservation process, hunters have restored populations of
deer, elk, antelope, turkeys and ducks to record numbers.
Hunting contributes over $30 billion to the economy each year,
supporting over 1,000,000 jobs. (National Shooting Sports
Foundation)
- Hunting provides food for people. For nearly a
decade, hunters have provided thousands of pounds of game meat
through donation programs such as Hunters Sharing the Harvest and
Hunters for the Hungry.
- Hunting helps manage animal populations
resulting in less human/animal traffic accidents.
Hunting Teaches Responsible
Gun Ownership
The socialization into gun ownership is also
vastly different for legal and illegal gun owners.
[Adolescents] who own legal guns have fathers who own guns
for sport and hunting. On the other hand, those who own illegal guns
have friends who own illegal guns and are far more likely to be gang
members. (U.S. Dept. Of Justice, March 1994, Office of Juvenile
Justice & Delinquency Prevention -Urban Delinquency &
Substance Abuse, July 1993.)
Persons in rural areas are more likely to be
hunters. The total violent crime rate and murder rate in rural
counties are 61% and 41% lower, respectively, than those found in
metropolitan areas. (Drawn from FBI Uniform Crime Reports, Crime in
the United States 2002.)
Public Support of Hunting
According to a May 2000 poll conducted by Roper
and Starch for the National Shooting Sports Foundation, 85% of
American adults agree that hunting has a legitimate place in modern
society. 58% were in strong agreement while 25% moderately
agreed.
- 62% agree that hunters are the world's leading
conservationists.
- 4 out of 10 Americans (42%) describe
themselves as either avid or occasional hunters--up 7 points from
1999.
Pittman-Robertson
Act
The vehicle that actually transforms money into
habitat, ecological study into proven conservation tactics, and the
idea of harmony between nature and society into reality is the
Pittman-Robertson Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act. Who fuels
this vehicle? Sportsmen.
Signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt
on Sept. 2, 1937, the Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act, or the
Pittman-Robertson Act, created a 10% excise tax on sporting arms and
ammunition. Revenue is deposited in a special trust fund under the
management of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to be used for state
wildlife restoration projects. In the 1970s the excise tax was
extended to archery equipment and handguns. One-half of the tax
revenue collected on handguns and archery equipment may be used by
state fish and wildlife agencies for hunter safety training and range
development.
The approximately 200 million dollars generated by
Pittman-Robertson each year are matched with sportsmens' dollars at
the state level to pay for projects that will restore wildlife
populations, expand habitat and train hunters. To date, more than
$4.2 billion in federal excise revenue has been generated. (U.S. Fish
& Wildlife Service)
NRA Supported
Legislation
NRA-ILA has been successful in promoting wildlife
conservation efforts on federal, state and local levels. Many pieces
of NRA-backed legislation have been enacted over the years to keep
pace with the wildlife management challenge.
Below are just a few of those efforts.
The Fish and Wildlife Programs Improvement Act of
2000 amended the PittmanRobertson and Dingell-Johnson Acts to make
needed reforms in the manner in which the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service manages these sportsmens' trust funds. NRA was the catalyst
for this reform which also earmarked $8 million annually for the
states to use in enhancing hunter education and range
development.
The National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement
Act of 1997, which NRA helped to shape, established the mission and
purposes of the Refuge System that provide wildlife with crucial
habitat for survival. This "organic" Act established hunting, fishing
and four other wildlifedependent recreational uses as "priority
general public uses," basically shutting the door on anti-hunters who
had claimed that the term "refuge" required the government to close
the land to all hunting.
The National Wildlife Refuge System presently
consists of 542 refuges totaling more than 92 million acres. Of these
refuges, 315 provide hunting opportunities. In 2003, NRA joined with
16 other conservation groups to draft an official agreement with the
Department of the Interior and the Department of Agriculture that
ensures sportsmen's access to federal lands, including Bureau of Land
Management, Forest Service and Fish and Wildlife Service lands. The
agreement calls for increased communication and involvement of the
private organizations regarding land planning and management issues
and provides for increased opportunities for sportsmen to assist with
the maintenance of roads and trails that provide public access to
federal lands.
The Migratory Bird Treaty Reform Act of 1998 more
equitably defined the standard for being cited for a baiting
violation, but increased the penalties for conviction of such a
violation. It replaced the "strict liability standard" with the
"reasonable man standard" that gives the hunter a much fairer
opportunity to defend himself in court.
The Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation
Act of 1980 prevented much of the federal estate from being made
inaccessible to sportsmen.
The Food Security Farm Bill funds voluntary,
incentive-based conservation programs that benefit the farmer, land,
water resources, hunters and wildlife.
Hunter and Shooting Range
Protection
Over the past twenty years, NRA has spearheaded the effort to pass
laws to protect hunters from harassment by animal
rights zealots. It is now illegal to interfere with a lawful hunt in
all fifty states.
NRA has helped to pass legislation at the state
level to protect shooting ranges from antigun zoning ordinances and
frivolous lawsuits. In 1994, only eight states had range protection
laws. Today, thanks in large measure to NRA, 46 states have such
laws.
Coalitions for
Conservation
In response to anti-hunting extremists that have
been focusing their efforts on state ballot initiatives designed to
trick the public into supporting their anti-hunting agendas, hunting
and conservation organizations including NRA have banded together to
more effectively push for conservation and hunters'
rights.
Ballot Issues Coalition
The Ballot Issues Coalition (BIC) was formed to
provide professional campaign management expertise and seed money to
state ballot campaigns that enhance or protect sportsmens' interests
in wildlife conservation. BIC also assists state sportsmen campaigns
to counterattack anti-trapping and anti-hunting
initiatives.
Public Land Shooting Sports
Roundtable
Nine organizations and agencies belong to the
roundtable including the Forest Service, the Bureau of Land
Management, NRA, National Shooting Sports Foundation and Wildlife
Management Institute. PLSSR was established in 1999 to promote
recreational shooting on state and federal lands.
National Wildlife Conservation
Partners
The group was formed in 2001 to help chart the
course for the future of wildlife conservation in the U.S. NWCP also
advises the President and Congress on issues related to wildlife
conservation and hunting. Thirty-five hunting and conservation groups
have joined NWCP. NRA is a member of the steering
committee.
Identifying the Enemy of
Wildlife: Animal Rights Groups
Groups who claim they stand for the well being of
animals and who are anti-hunting base their claims entirely on
emotion and not biological wildlife science. While animal rights
groups concentrate their efforts on making sure a few animals do not
fall to the bullets of hunters, the species as a whole suffers. These
groups routinely raise large amounts of money in the name of
wildlife, but give nothing in return. Below is a list of some of the
most virulent anti-hunting groups.
American Humane Association
American Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
Animal Protection Institute
Animal Welfare Institute
Earthjustice Legal Defense Fund
Friends of Animals
Fund for Animals
Humane Society of the United States
In Defense of Animals
International Fund for Animal Welfare
Last Chance for Animals
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
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