USSA Director Testifies Before Congress on Federal Lands Bill

This from the USSA is relative to a way of thinking that honors the outdoors traditions so many of us enjoy.  Sure beats what the lefties are always pushing.  Here’s a little “push back”…GW

(Columbus,  OH) Protection of fishing, hunting, and shooting on our National Forests and  public lands is assured by H.R. 2834 (the Recreational Fishing and Hunting  Heritage and Opportunities Act), the U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance Director of  Federal Affairs Bill Horn told Congress today.

Horn,  who testified before the House Natural Resources Committee, spoke in support of  the bill while explaining the details. He revealed how H.R. 2834 would solve several  public land access problems for anglers, hunters, trappers, and shooters.

“Continued  silence in the law regarding the legitimacy and contributory role of fishing  and hunting on Forest and Bureau of Land Management lands will ultimately cause  the loss of these activities on over 400 million acres of our public lands,”  stated Horn. “This silence must be corrected, and H.R. 2834 does precisely  that. It plainly recognizes fishing, hunting and shooting as legitimate and  important activities on Forest and BLM lands.   It directs the agencies to exercise their discretion, consistent with  the other applicable law, to facilitate fishing, hunting and shooting.”

Horn,  who is a former assistant secretary of the U.S. Department of Interior, also noted that frivolous lawsuits, various court rulings, and even agency actions have  resulted in hunting and fishing being restricted or closed on public lands. H.R.  2834 would make those activities essential uses of those public lands and guide  managers to exercise an “open until closed” philosophy. This would save  millions of dollars of administrative expense and insulate fishing and hunting  from unwarranted indirect attacks.

H.R.  2834 is modeled after the 1997 Refuge System Improvement Act that was  championed by the U. S. Sportsmen’s Alliance. That legislation ultimately  helped keep open fishing and hunting on the National Wildlife Refuge System and  was an important part of the winning argument that protected hunting on more  than 60 Refuge units that anti-hunting groups had tried to close.

USSA  has been urging Congress to pass legislation comparable to H.R. 2834 since  1998.  Critics dismissed earlier bills as  “solutions in search of a problem,” but during the past decade the sporting  community has recognized that there is a problem.  Legal challenges, requests for environmental  impact studies, and other tactics by anti-hunting and animal rights groups have  threatened fishing and hunting on federal lands.  H.R. 2834 will block these threats.

Groups  joining the U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance in this public lands bill effort include:  the American Fisheries Society, American Sportfishing Association, B.A.S.S.  LLC, Congressional Sportsmen Foundation, National Rifle Association, and Safari Club International.

About  the U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance: The USSA is a national watchdog organization that protects the rights of  hunters, anglers and trappers in the courts, legislatures, at the ballot and in  Congress.  Last year, the USSA served more than 3.1 million sportsmen in  44 states through their work on bills and other issues, educational programs,  and legal defense.  Currently, the USSA has  more than 150,000 members who act as a powerful grassroots network for  sportsmen and sportswomen from coast to coast.   For more information about the U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance, call (614)  888-4868 or visit: www.ussportsmen.org.