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U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service 75 years of Conservation and Partnership Success Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program ii Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program Foreword In the middle of the Great Depression in 1937, America faced an unprecedented environmental crisis. The Dust Bowl afflicted much of the nation’s heartland. Unwise development ravaged millions of acres of wetlands and other vital wildlife habitat, and many species were near extinction. In response to this crisis, the nation’s sportsmen successfully lobbied Congress to pass what is arguably the most effective conservation law in history -- the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act. In effect, sportsmen selflessly convinced Congress to tax them to fund conservation. The Act established an excise tax on firearms, ammunition and archery equipment that is apportioned to states to support the conservation mission of their fish and wildlife agencies. Along with the Dingell- Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Act passed in 1950 to establish a similar tax on fishing and boating equipment, the law ensures a permanent, dedicated source of conservation funding. It is widely recognized as having provided the foundation for professional wildlife management at both the state and federal level. As we celebrate the 75th anniversary of this landmark law, President Obama and his administration are building on this great foundation through the America’s Great Outdoors initiative. In partnership with communities across the country, we are seeking to establish a conservation ethic for the 21st century and to reconnect people, especially young people, to the natural world. For three generations, Pittman- Robertson has served as a model of conservation partnership. Let us celebrate its success. Let us also seek to build new partnerships that will ensure the health of our land, our water and our wildlife and provide opportunities for future generations to enjoy them. Foreword iii Secretary of the Interior, Ken Salazar Credit: DOI/Tami A. Heilman iv Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program equipment manufacturers who pay an excise tax on the equipment they produce as well as the millions of sportsmen and -women who effectively pay that tax through the purchase of equipment to hunt, fish, shoot and boat, or otherwise enjoy the great American outdoors and our wildlife heritage. The funds collected provide the very foundation of wildlife management in this country. They are dispersed to the various state wildlife agencies, through the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and complement the funding from the sale of hunting and fishing licenses. They also provide critical funding for vital habitat enhancement projects proposed by the states. This approach, born of the Dust Bowl days and echoing that first gathering of conservation visionaries, has resulted in what has become known worldwide as the North American Conservation Model -- which recognizes we all do our best work for wildlife when we work together. For their dream to indeed become a reality, there would be a continuing need to establish strong conservation partnerships at that time and in the future to face the serious challenges in wildlife and environmental conservation. In 1987, as part of its commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act, commonly referred to as the Pittman-Robertson Act in honor of its Congressional sponsors, the Service produced a book entitled Restoring America’s Wildlife, a retrospective volume In 1936, President Franklin Roosevelt convened the first ever North American Wildlife Conference bringing together representatives of the various state wildlife agencies, conservation organizations, and other wildlife interests. He opened the meeting charging those in attendance to work together, and said he hoped that “from it will come constructive proposals for concrete actions… and that through those proposals state and federal agencies and conservation groups can work together for the common good.” Thus was forged a partnership among wildlife conservation interests that in the following year was to be formalized by enactment of the Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act. This year we pay tribute to 75 years of successful fish and wildlife management and habitat enhancement based on the revenues resulting from the Act and accompanying legislation enacted since 1937. We also salute the sporting arms, archery, and fishing documenting the outstanding wildlife conservation stories resulting from that landmark legislation. The intent of this report is to present the same for the past 25 years, and include the many successes realized in fishery conservation resulting from passage of the Dingell- Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Act in 1950. Later, the Wallop- Breaux Amendments effectively combined these programs and resulted in the conservation model we follow today. That book concluded that the “Pittman-Robertson program is the single most productive wildlife undertaking on record…and that it has meant more for wildlife in more ways than any other effort.” I believe this current volume heartily reaffirms that conclusion, and I hope you agree. Finally, I would like to offer a big thanks to the numerous wildlife professionals, writers, photographers, artists and others who have graciously contributed their time and effort in order to make this outstanding publication possible. I certainly hope you find it a worthy salute to three-quarters of a century of outstanding American wildlife conservation. Fish and Wildlife Service Director, Dan Ashe (Foreword, contined) Credit: USFWS/Lavonda Walton Message from the Director Seventy-five years of successful wildlife management is the remarkable legacy of the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act, and the cause of our 75th celebration. Along with the Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Act, it is the foundation of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s (USFWS) Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program (WSFR) and a cornerstone of the North American model of fish and wildlife management – a model venerated for its principles, celebrated for its performance, and embraced for its promise for the future. The two Acts mark the triumph of American conservation, founded on public ownership of wildlife, reliance on partnerships, and commitment to preserve our natural heritage. America’s history of wildlife management began in the chaos of the “commons”—the vast wild lands jointly held and used by all U.S. citizens as a collective asset. A seemingly unlimited resource was relentlessly hunted and fished by a growing population with an insatiable appetite for the food, clothing, trophies, and commercial products wildlife provided. In the jargon of economics, the marginal benefit of hunting one more animal accrued exclusively to the individual hunter, while the cumulative costs of unlimited hunting fell crushingly on the shoulders of society. The discrepancy in benefit and cost led to uncontrolled harvest and the rapid decline of wildlife nationwide. State wildlife agencies stepped into the picture in the early 20th Century with the goal of affirming public ownership of wildlife – the Public Trust Doctrine – and regulating its harvest with licenses. Yet, apart from the revenue from license sales, the wildlife agencies operated on a financial shoe string. Pittman-Robertson and, later, Dingell Johnson came to their fiscal rescue. The excise taxes raised by those Acts – excise taxes paid for by hunters and anglers – along with license fees established the principle of user pays/public benefits, the fiscal foundation of game management in America. The funding enabled by these Acts, however, is only part of the success story. The glue that secures the framework of modern wildlife management is partnership. Our celebration of WSFR’s 75th Anniversary is really a celebration of the power of partnership, of the hunters and anglers who pay the cost of conservation with fees and taxes, the outdoor sporting industries that make the system of excise taxes possible, the State fish and wildlife agencies that provide the scientific know-how to manage game, the many citizen groups and nongovernmental organizations that expand the States’ capacity to manage wildlife, and the USFWS that works hand-in- hand with the States to administer the WSFR Program. We should take pride in the legacy of the WSFR Program over the past 75 years. It has helped empower our State agencies and citizen conservationists to achieve as a nation what no other nation in the world has achieved: unparalleled wildlife Foreword v management success. Sadly, the full story of that success is still largely untold; but it will be told. The new Wildlife TRACS performance reporting system for the WSFR Program will make that story known and available to everyone who cares about wildlife conservation. Finally, to quote the great English bard, what’s past is prologue. Just as the North American model calmed the tempest of the wildlife commons, that same model points the way to conserving the diversity and richness of all wildlife in America. It won’t be easy, but through the synergy of federal, state, and private partnerships, the work that began 75 years ago in 1937 with the passage of Pittman Robertson will carry us to the next 75 years, into a future where our success will extend to all species. Credit: DOI/Tami A. Heilman Hannibal Bolton Message from the Assistant Director for Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program vvii C Setleabtruasti nRge tvhiee wW ialdnlidfe C anodn sSeprovrta Ftiiosnh RReesctoormatmione nPdroagtrioamns for the Gull-billed Tern Table of Contents vii Table of Contents Foreword ...............................................................................................................................................................iii Message from the Director ...................................................................................................................................iv Message from the Assistant Director for Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration .....................................................v The Beginning 75 Years Ago..................................................................................................................................1 A History of Major Events in State and Federal Wildlife Conservation .................................................................. 5 National Outlook Congressional Viewpoints ........................................................................................................................... 8 The Lifeblood of State Fish & Wildlife Agencies .................................................................................... 9 Industry Pride in its Conservation Efforts ............................................................................................ 13 Boating-Related Revenues Pack a Powerful Funding Punch for Aquatic Conservation and Boating Infrastructure Programs ........................................................................... 17 Valuing the Benefits of Wildlife............................................................................................................................ 21 Quick Facts from the 2011 National Survey................................................................................................ 22 National Survey Trends Graph .............................................................................................................. 27 State Outlook Reliable Funding Source Benefits America’s Sport Fisheries ............................................................. 29 Fishing and Hunting License Trends ...................................................................................................... 31 Preserving Virginia’s Wild Heritage ....................................................................................................... 33 Education Realm Hunter Education ..................................................................................................................................... 37 Aquatic Resource Education .................................................................................................................... 41 Becoming an Outdoors-Woman................................................................................................................. 43 “Trophies” - WSFR’s 75th Anniversary Painting .................................................................................................. 44 Conservation Success Stories Pacific Region: The Elements of Success: How WSFR Funds Helped Create Summer Lake Wildlife Management Area ..............................................................................................45 Conservation on Sarigan Island, Northern Mariana Islands................................................................46 Southwest Region: Desert Bighorn Sheep Restoration in New Mexico .............................................47 Midwest Region: Renovation of Wisconsin’s Wild Rose State Fish Hatchery ...................................49 Southeast Region: Elk Restoration and Management in Eastern Kentucky .....................................50 Alabama Children Get Their Feet Wet in the Creek Kids Program.....................................................51 Northeast Region: Virginia’s Quail Recovery .........................................................................................52 Restoration of Arctic Char and Eastern Brook Trout at Big Reed Pond, Maine ...............................52 Mountain Prairie Region: Smith Family “Legacy” Becomes New Addition to Utah’s Tabby Mountain Wildlife Management Area ............................................................................54 viii C eSlteabtruatsi nRg ethveie Wwi ladnlifde Canodn Sspeorrvta Ftiisohn R Resetcoormatimone Pnrdoagtriaomns for the Gull-billed Tern Whirling Disease Research in Colorado-Resitant Rainbow Trout Studies .........................................56 Alaska Region: Kenai Moose Research Center - A World Leader in Moose Science ........................57 Pacific Southwest: Lake Mohave Habitat Enhancement ......................................................................59 Wildlife Reflections Hunting and Fishing: A Modern Answer to Environmental Concerns ...............................................61 A Noiseless Effort that Has Changed the World ....................................................................................63 Acknowledgments ................................................................................................................................................65 Appendix - Program Data ................................................................................................................................66-76 Name of Section 1 The Beginning 75 Years Ago Mark Madison, Historian U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Creating a New Conservation Constituency: The Pittman-Robertson Act of 1937 and the Dingell- Johnson Act of 1950 The America of colonial times teemed with wildlife and fish. However, the country’s rapid westward expansion in the 19th century took an enormous toll on wildlife habitat which disappeared at an alarming rate. Moreover, by the 20th century, decades of poor enforcement of existing hunting laws, the unregulated growth of market hunting, and hunters who took more than their share (commonly referred to as “game hogs”) added to the decline of once-abundant wildlife populations with many game species teetering on the brink of extinction. Although today it may be hard to believe, in 1937 there were relatively few white-tailed deer remaining in the country. In Indiana, for example, the last known specimen had been killed in 1893, and spotting one anywhere on the East Coast would have been a rare event. Out West, pronghorn antelope, elk, and bighorn sheep populations were fast declining. Beavers were practically nonexistent south of the Canadian border, and wild turkeys faced imminent extinction across the country. Many dedicated conservationists and sportsmen alike watched this trend with growing alarm and worked to get the country’s first wildlife laws enacted to protect America’s wildlife and the habitat upon which it depended. In the 1930s, a combined economic depression and ecological disaster led the federal government to seek innovative ways to help impoverished Americans and conserve our nation’s lands and wildlife. The Great Depression and the Great Plains Dust Bowl destroyed families and decimated wildlife habitat, leading President Franklin Roosevelt, wildlife conservation organizations, sportsmen, and several concerned Congressmen to work together to pass a series of laws that, today, are still the foundation of this country’s natural resource conservation programs. The creation of the Civilian Conservation Corps (1933- 1942) introduced 2.5 million young men to outdoor work on national forests, parks, and wildlife refuges. In 1934 the Migratory Bird Hunting Stamp Act (popularly known as the Duck Stamp Act) raised money for wetland acquisition through the sale of special revenue stamps required for legal hunting of waterfowl. President Roosevelt, in 1936, convened the First North American Wildlife Conference, which brought together a variety of agencies and organizations to discuss the future of wildlife conservation in America. The Beginning 75 Years Ago 1 Market hunters also known as “game hogs”. Credit: USFWS Senator Key Pittman of Nevada Credit: USFWS Representative A. Willis Robertson of Virginia. Credit: USFWS Drought and wind took a toll on habitat. (Dallas, South Dakota 1936) Credit: U.S. Department of Agriculture Status Review and Conservation Recommendations for the Gull-billed Tern sponsor the bill in the Senate and the Senator quickly concurred with the bill’s original language. Shoemaker then asked Virginia Congressman A. Willis Robertson to co-sponsor the bill in the House. Robertson, a former chairman of the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries from 1926-1932, closely examined its language. As chairman, Robertson had seen game funds repeatedly raided for other state projects. Based on his own experience, he said he would support the bill if Shoemaker would insert the following sentence: “…and which shall include a prohibition against the diversion of license fees paid by hunters for any other purpose than the administration of said State fish and game department…” Shoemaker agreed, stating that the 29 words were the most important additions made by anyone. With this amendment, Congress passed the bill, shepherded by a constituency of Congressional sportsmen and -women. Pittman-Robertson represented a milestone in North American conservation history. All hunters (not just waterfowl hunters) were actively investing in the future of wildlife and its habitat. The North American Model of Conservation was solidified; not only did the 2 Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program The 1937 Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act (popularly known as the Pittman-Robertson Act after its Congressional sponsors) was the next step in a quickly-evolving American conservation movement. It provided a much-needed, stable source of funding for wildlife conservation programs across the country and today is considered the single most productive wildlife undertaking on record. Interestingly enough, the legislation’s most vocal supporters were sportsmen and hunters – the very group that would be most affected by the tax. Many hunters made it clear they willingly would accept a permanent tax if it meant the government would use the funds to work with the states to ensure the sustainability of popular game animals. Although these partners recognized the urgency of securing a permanent dedicated funding source, it still took a great deal of work to actually pass the Act. The idea behind Federal Aid goes back at least to 1935 when a proposal was first made to use an existing excise tax on sporting arms and ammunition for game restoration and habitat acquisition to be managed by the Biological Survey. Normally, this proposal would have garnered support from sportsmen; however in the midst of an economic depression it was a tough sell to transfer any excise tax revenue out of general government funds needed for the country’s recovery. During the 1930s, a group of gifted conservationists and new organizations kept the issue alive for the next several years. The recently-hired head of the Biological Survey, Jay N. “Ding” Darling was a noted prize-winning political cartoonist, conservationist, sportsman, and influential friend of President Franklin Roosevelt. A visionary, Darling lobbied ceaselessly for the funds to support wildlife restoration. Upon retiring from the Bilogical Survey in 1935 he went on to found the National Wildlife Federation (NWF) in 1936 which made wildlife restoration its mission. Darling, himself, relentlessly pressed all of his Washington contacts to move the act forward. Carl Shoemaker, NWF’s Secretary, was equally influential in securing the Act’s passage. A Washington insider who knew Congress well, Shoemaker also served as the Secretary of the Senate Wildlife Committee at the time. He has been called the “father of the P-R program” because he drafted the original legislation that would not only be acceptable to both houses of Congress but also satisfy conservationists and sportsmen. Shoemaker asked Nevada Senator Key Pittman to J.N. “Ding” Darling – cartoonist, hunter, and conservationist. Credit:USFWS J.N. “Ding” Darling illustration. Credit: USFWS Carl Shoemaker...author of the legislation. Credit: National Wildlife Federation Name of Section 3 American people own the nation’s wildlife, but now they actively supported it financially. Finally, the P-R Act was the beginning of a series of acts which found innovative ways to support ongoing wildlife conservation needs. Signed into law by President Franklin Roosevelt on September 2, 1937, the Pittman-Robertson Act specified a 10 percent tax on hunting-specific guns and ammunition and mandated the money be set aside to aid the states in funding wildlife restoration projects. To account for vast differences in land area and population size among the states, a formula was created to calculate how much money each state should receive, taking into consideration both the size of the state and the number of licensed hunters residing there. States were eligible to receive up to 75 percent of total project costs from the Pittman-Robertson fund, with the expectation they would provide the remaining 25 percent. This provision encouraged states to take greater responsibility for their own conservation programs, while also ensuring they could afford the resources necessary to implement them. During the first ten years following the passage of the Act, 38 states acquired roughly 900,000 acres of land for use as wildlife management areas. Early projects focused on habitat reclamation and wildlife relocation, transplanting deer and other endangered animals from states such as Wisconsin and Michigan (which had fewer people and more wildlife) into states with dwindling game populations. By 1948, wildlife experts across the country had moved thousands of deer, pronghorn antelope, and elk, as well as smaller numbers of mountain goats, wild sheep, and bears. The success of these efforts was quick and dramatic; given access to protected habitat with sufficient water and food, transplanted species thrived. Indiana quickly recovered from its deer shortage, recording about 5,000 specimens in 1951 and more than 50,000 by 1970. Other states, The Beginning 75 Years Ago 3 particularly those in the South, recorded similar upsurges in deer populations. The pronghorn antelope was brought back from near-extinction, and beavers were restored in nearly all areas that made up their original range. The rest of the targeted species saw marked success as well. Since its initial passage, the Pittman-Robertson Act has been amended several times. Of the money provided by Wildlife Funds in the past 25 years, approximately 45 percent has gone toward acquiring (through purchase or lease) and maintaining lands for wildlife management, approximately 28 percent has been used for wildlife surveys, research, and technical assistance, and approximately 12 percent has been used for hunter education. A small portion is set aside yearly for coordination and administration. (See Accomplishments Pie Charts, Appendix). Hunter Education Funds are made up partly through the allocation of 50 percent of the tax on pistols, revolvers, and some archery materials. The money collected by Pittman- Robertson has grown steadily in the 75 years since its enactment. In 1939, the year it went into effect, the amount of money apportioned by the federal government to the states totaled $890,000. In 2010, the program provided approximately $473 million, divided among all 50 states as well as Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, the Northern Mariana Islands, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Since 1937, more than $7.1 billion (almost $14 billion 2012 dollars see Apportionments, Appendix) has been dispensed for various conservation projects, matched by about $2.4 billion in state contributions. In 75 years, states have acquired millions of Waterfowl sportswoman with dog. Credit: USWS 4 Status Review and Conservation Recommendations for the Gull-billed Tern U.S. Congressman John Dingell (center) sponsored bill leading to Sport Fish Restoration Act. Credit: USFWS acres of land for conservation purposes, and have worked with some 9.3 million landowners to help them manage their own lands for the benefit of native wildlife. Today many species have been successfully restored, including wild turkeys, deer, pronghorn antelope, wood ducks, beavers, bears, Canada geese, elk, wild sheep, bobcats, and mountain lions. Many other species have benefitted indirectly from Pittman-Robertson conservation efforts such as songbirds, bald eagles, falcons, sea otters, and prairie dogs. Perhaps the Act’s most important legacy is the development of a new conservation constituency of millions of sportsmen and -women who directly invest in the wildlife resources they so deeply cherish. The success of Pittman- Robertson inspired anglers to undertake a similar effort to provide a source of funding for the nation’s fisheries. In 1947, Michigan Congressman John Dingell introduced a bill patterned after Pittman- Robertson to impose a 10 percent manufacturers’ excise tax on certain equipment for recreational fishing. The monies collected under the authority of the proposed legislation were to be returned to the states to help fund sport fish programs. Although vetoed by President Truman, the bill ignited increased support from the country’s growing number of anglers. In 1950, Congressman Dingell and Colorado Senator Edwin Johnson introduced a revised version and, on August 9, 1950, President Truman signed the Federal Aid in Sport Fish Restoration Act into law. The Sport Fish Restoration Act, commonly known today as Dingell-Johnson, applied a ten percent manufacturers’ excise tax on fishing rods, reels, creels, and artificial baits, lures, and flies, with the revenue earmarked for the states and territories for projects that would enhance sport fish restoration. Since 1950, state projects have included the full array of the sport, from efforts to increase anglers’ access, to fish stocking, removal of invasive species, improved fish ladders to fish disease studies. (See Accomplishments Pie Charts, Appendix) However, all share a commitment to the better management of state fisheries resources. The Dingell- Johnson Act provided the perfect complement to the earlier Pittman-Robertson legislation. Now, aquatic habitats and species would reap similar benefits as their terrestrial counterparts. Equally important, anglers joined hunters in investing in and supporting conservation programs aimed at saving this country’s natural fish and wildlife heritage. Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program U.S. Senator Edwin Johnson of Colorado sponsored bill leading to Sport Fish Restoration Act. Credit: USFWS Name of Section Survey; still later, it is renamed the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 1887 - Efforts to ban or regulate commercial hunting accelerate when Theodore Roosevelt and George Bird Grinnell start the Boone and Crockett Club to promote and ensure the future of big game hunting in North America. 1890 - Wyoming places a moratorium on bison hunting. 1895 – Michigan and North Dakota pass the first laws requiring all hunters to purchase state hunting licenses. 1900 - The Lacey Act is passed prohibiting interstate shipping of wildlife taken in violation of any state game law. Managed by the Biological Survey, it puts market hunters out of business. 1903 - First National Wildlife Refuge is established on Pelican Island, Florida a habitat devastated by market hunting and plume traders. 1908 - On May 13, President Theodore Roosevelt hosts the White House Conference on the Conservation of Natural Resources. Attending are governors, members of his Cabinet and the Supreme Court, members of Congress, scientists, industrial leaders and conservationists - all called together to focus on the loss of wildlife, forests, and other natural resources caused by the exploitation of what had once been perceived as inexhaustible. 1930 – Aldo Leopold and a distinguished group of wildlife conservationists are asked by the American Game Institute 1865 - Massachusetts establishes a Commission of Fisheries and Game, the first State game commission. 1875 - Pressed by sport hunters, Arkansas passes the first law banning all commercial hunting of waterfowl. Similar laws were quickly passed in Florida and other states. 1878 - New Hampshire and California create state game departments. 1879 - With populations of many major game species in severe decline, Michigan placed a ten-year moratorium on elk hunting. 1885 - Division of Economic Ornithology and Mammalogy is established within the U.S. Department of Agriculture. With Clinton Hart Merriam as its first Chief, much of the Division’s early work is focused on studying the positive effects of birds in controlling agricultural pests and defining the geographical distribution of animals and plants throughout the country. The Division later expands and is renamed the Bureau of Biological A History of Major Events in State and Federal Wildlife Conservation (now the Wildlife Management Institute) to draft a policy to guide wildlife conservation. The 1930 American Game Policy lays out a broad vision, acknowledging that existing conservation programs are inadequate to stem the declines in wildlife. It calls for a program of restoration implemented by scientifically- trained professionals with a stable funding source and declares it is time for wildlife management to “be recognized as a distinct profession and developed accordingly.” Carl Shoemaker is appointed special investigator for the newly created U.S. Senate Special Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. He later becomes the author of the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act. 1934 - The Migratory Bird Hunting Stamp Act, popularly known as the “Duck Stamp Act,” is passed by Congress. The Act requires the purchase of a revenue stamp by waterfowl hunters 16 years old and over. Money generated by stamp sales is used to acquire or lease important wetlands. Since its inception, the program has resulted in the protection of approximately 5.3 million acres of waterfowl habitat. Unregulated hunting sped the decline of wildlife populations. Credit: Missouri Department of Natural Resources 1934-1935 Federal Duck Stamp, designed by J.N. “Ding” Darling The Beginning 75 Years Ago 5 66 C Selteabtruatsi nRg etvheie Wwi ladnlidfe Canodn Sspeorrvta Ftiisohn R Reestcoormatimone Pnrdoagtriaomns for the Gull-billed Tern 1937 - The Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act (commonly referred to as the Pittman- Robertson Act) is passed by Congress to provide grant funds to the states’, and insular areas’ fish and wildlife agencies for projects to restore, conserve, manage, and enhance wild birds and mammals and their habitat. Through the purchases of firearms, ammunitions, and archery equipment, the Wildlife Restoration program remains a successful user pay, user benefit program. 1939 - The Bureaus of Fisheries and Biological Survey are moved to the Department of the Interior and the following year combined to create the Fish and Wildlife Service. 1950 - The Federal Aid in Sport Fish Restoration Act (commonly referred to as the Dingell-Johnson Act) is passed to create a program to support the restoration and improvement of America’s fishery resources. It provides grant funds to the states’, the District of Columbia’s and insular areas’ fish and wildlife agencies for fishery projects. It is modeled after the successful Wildlife Restoration program. The purchases of fishing equipment fund this program. 1954 - Funds from an 11 percent excise tax on sporting arms and ammunition [Internal Revenue Code of 1954, sec. 4161(b)] are appropriated to the Secretary of the Interior and apportioned to States on a formula basis for paying up to 75 percent of the cost of approved projects. Project activities include acquisition and improvement of wildlife habitat, introduction of wildlife into suitable habitat, research into wildlife problems, surveys and inventories of wildlife problems and acquisition and development of access facilities for public use. 1955 – Cossley, S-D Surveys Inc. of New York conducts the first National Survey of Fishing and Hunting under contract to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 1965 – Bird watching and wildlife photography are added to the National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation. 1970 - Public Law 91-503, approved October 23, 1970, (84 Stat. 1097) adds provisions for the deposit of the 10 percent tax on pistols and revolvers, half of which may be used by the States for hunter safety programs. This amendment also provides for development of comprehensive fish and wildlife management plans as an optional means for participating in the program, and changes the maximum limit from $10,000 to one-half of one percent for Puerto Rico and to one-sixth of one percent for the Virgin Islands and Guam. 1972 - On October 25, 1972, the Act is further amended by P.L. 92-558 (86 Stat. 1172) to add provisions for the deposit of the 11 percent excise tax on bows, arrows, their parts, and accessories for use in wildlife projects or hunter safety programs. 1973 - The 1930 American Game Policy is expanded into the North American Wildlife Policy to meet growing conservation challenges: the continued expansion of the human population, increased resource consumption, recreational use of fish and wildlife, endangered species, habitat management, and multiple-use policies. The updated Policy sets the stage for efforts to sustain our hunting heritage, focus on non-game and game species, establish international agreements to support wildlife conservation, provide incentives for private landowners for wildlife habitat management, enhance range management and wetland protection, and expand public outreach and conservation education. 1975 – Archery and shooting sports are added to the National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation. 11% excise tax on bows and arrows. Credit: Missouri Department of Natural Resources Credit: Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries The BegNinanmineg o75f SYeeacrtsi oAng o 77 1980 – Congress passes the Forsythe-Chafee Fish and Wildlife Conservation Act (“Nongame Act”), modeled after Pittman- Robertson and Dingell-Johnson, to expand federal support to restore and conserve nongame vertebrate species. Congress never authorized funding for the program. 1984 - Public Law 98-369, approved July 18, 1984 (26 U.S.C. 9504, 98 Stat. 1012) creates the Aquatic Resources Trust Fund comprised of the Sport Fish Restoration Account and the Boating Safety Account. This amendment expands the items of fishing tackle subject to the 10 percent excise tax and imposed a new 3 percent excise tax on fish finders and electric trolling motors. In addition, it provides for the deposit of receipts from these excise taxes and from the following sources into the Sport Fish Restoration Account: the motorboat fuels tax revenues less amounts deposited into the Boating Safety Account, and the import duties on fishing tackle, yachts and pleasure craft. This Act also directs that the additional funds be equitably allocated between marine and freshwater sport fish and directs States to use up to 10 percent of funds for boating access facilities and aquatic resources education programs. 1984 - Public Law 98-369 also amends the Sport Fish Restoration Act to require the States to equitably allocate these new funds between marine and fresh water projects and to allocate 10 percent of apportionments to boating facilities. Payments for multi-year projects are authorized; the administrative expense deduction is reduced from 8 percent to 6 percent; up to 10 percent is authorized for aquatic resources education; and the District of Columbia is qualified for one third of one percent. The effective date of these amendments is October 1, 1984, and they are commonly called the Wallop-Breaux amendments. 1988 - Public Law 100-448, approved September 28, 1988 (102 Stat. 1836) increases the amount authorized to be appropriated from the motor boat fuels tax receipts into the Boating Safety Account from $45 million to $60 million for Fiscal Years 1989 and 1990, then to $70 million for Fiscal Years 1991, 1992, and 1993. It also amends the Sport Fish Restoration Act to require States to equitably allocate all amounts apportioned between marine and freshwater projects, with no State to receive less than the amount apportioned in 1988. 1998 – Public Law 105-178 (112 Stat.482), June 9, 1998, entitled the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century, contains the Sportfishing and Boating Safety Act. These provisions create a national outreach program to promote boating and fishing and provide funds for fiscal years 1999 through 2003. 1991 – The Fish and Wildlife Diversity Initiative is launched by the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies (AFWA). Legislation titled the Fish and Wildlife Diversity Funding Act is drafted providing for excise taxes on outdoor products and conservation programs for all vertebrates and invertebrates. This effort would later be renamed the Teaming with Wildlife Initiative (TWW). 2000 - The Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Programs Improvement Act of 2000 authorizes the Secretary of the Interior to develop and implement a Multistate Conservation Grant Program, a Firearm and Bow Hunter Education and Safety Program, and provides funding for four fisheries commissions and the Sport Fishing and Boating Partnership Council. 2000 - Congress authorizes the State Wildlife Grants Program and passes the Wildlife Conservation and Restoration Act. Both programs are funded in part through the Land and Water Conservation Fund. 2005 - Public Law 109-59 (119 STAT. 1144) August 10, 2005, entitled Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users, amends the Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Act to make authorization of appropriations from the Sport Fish Restoration and Boating Trust Fund. 2005 - Public Law 109-74 (119 Stat. 2030), entitled the Sportfishing and Recreational Boating Safety Amendments Act, increases the authorization of appropriations from the Highway Trust Fund to the Secretary of Transportation for payment of expenses of the Coast Guard for the national recreational boating safety program 2011 - The first comprehensive revision of the regulations that govern the Wildlife Restoration, Sport Fish Restoration, and Hunter Education programs is published and located in Part 80 of Title 50 of the Code of Federal Regulations. Status Review and Conservation Recommendations for the Gull-billed Tern August 14, 2012 As a conservationist, life-long avid outdoorsman and former Park Ranger, few issues are as important to me as the health and accessibility of our public lands and wildlife protection. Throughout my career, I have been a tireless advocate for the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program and other initiatives to conserve our natural resources and protect the environment, public lands, and wildlife. A large number of wildlife species, as well as people, benefit from healthy wetland systems, and these enjoyable experi-ences can instill a lasting appreciation for our great outdoors unlike any other. Wildlife-related recreation generates over $120 billion of economic output each year in our country and such wildlife wetlands and refuges are also proven to prevent flooding, reduce the severity of storm surges, and mitigate the damag-ing effects of soil erosion. As my father, who helped create this program, used to say, “we are borrowing the land from future generations.” I am proud of his work to create this program and our efforts to sustain it, and I will continue to ensure that we leave the land in better condition than when we received it so our children and grandchildren can enjoy it as I have throughout my life with my father and my children. ~U.S. House of Representatives, John Dingell, Michigan August 15, 2012 Throughout my career in Congress, I have amassed a reputation for being a fierce proponent of develop-ing the resources of Alaska and our great nation. However, another priority that garners less attention is my work for the conservation of America’s fish and wildlife. As a founding Member of the Congressional Sportsmen’s Caucus, former Chairman of the House Resources Committee, and currently a senior Mem-ber of the House Natural Resources Committee, I have worked on many bipartisan legislative efforts to conserve fish and wildlife species, both at home and abroad, for future generations of Americans to experi-ence and enjoy. As Chairman, I sponsored one of these important initiatives - the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Programs Improvement Act of 2000, which continued and modernized the Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Act and the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act. This legislation, which passed both houses of Congress nearly unanimously, serves as an example of how Congress can work together, with a supportive Administration, industry, and sportsmen stakeholders towards an achievable goal to enact good legislation that makes a difference. Through the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program, the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act along with the Federal Aid in Sport Fish Restoration Act (now the Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Res-toration Act) has contributed more than $14 billion to fish and wildlife conservation in the U.S. As we celebrate the 75th anniversary of the Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act (now the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act) we should pause and take note of the successes realized, while also looking to the future and recognizing that there is much work left to be done. ~U.S. House of Representatives, Don Young, Alaska National Outlook Congressional Viewpoints 8 Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program The Wildlife and Sport Fish RNesatmorea toiofn S Percotgioranm 9 The times were as bleak as a nation had ever known. Unemployment and economic stagnation were worsening in post-World War I America and the abundance of wildlife riches that once graced the landscape were dwindling or disappearing altogether. By the 1930s, the United States had already seen the extinction of the Carolina Parakeet and the Passenger Pigeon due to indiscriminate killing, unenforceable laws and a lack of science on the two species’ behavior and ecology. White-tailed deer populations were near all-time lows and in some places were completely eliminated. Other species such as the wood duck, wild turkey and bison were not far behind. Americans took the sustainability of the country’s wildlife populations for granted, without considering the toll their actions were taking on many species and, therefore, on opportunities for hunting. Fledgling fish and game agencies of the early 1900s had become the stewards of their state’s natural resources, but they desperately struggled to find funding to carry out needed wildlife research and restoration efforts. Most of the activities within state wildlife agencies were directed toward ensuring the enforcement of inadequate game and fish laws, where, at least, they could acquire funds through the sale of hunting and fishing permits or licenses and fines collected from game and fish violations. In South Carolina, for example, a game warden’s pay equaled one-half of the total monies he collected from fines. But even with such meager funding sources, state agencies had to stay ever on guard against threats by cash-strapped state administrations. The agencies knew the need for action in wildlife restoration was urgent and the timing was right. With Franklin D. Roosevelt in the White House, wildlife conservation became one of the two key components in his New Deal; the other, employment. Roosevelt believed that private enterprise would be stimulated, not threatened, by works in conservation. The state agency members of the International Association of Game, Fish and Conservation Commissioners (IAGFCC—the precursor to the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies) saw the potential for their own concerns in this new federal attitude. Furthermore, they were backed by conservation leaders including Aldo Leopold and Ding Darling, in addition to THE WILDLIFE AND SPORT FISH RESTORATION PROGRAM: THE LIFEBLOOD OF STATE FISH & WILDLIFE AGENCIES John Frampton, WSFR 75th Anniversary Director, AFWA Carol Bambery, General Counsel, AFWA others from Theodore Roosevelt’s era. After much hard work from conservationists, sportsmen, and Congress, in 1937, President Roosevelt signed the Wildlife Restoration Act into law. Immediately, IAGFCC declared its support for new legislation to provide federal funding to states for fishing resources. With the creation of reservoirs across the country during the 20th century, state agencies recognized a need for information on the ecology of impounded fisheries and the state of America’s hatcheries. These hatcheries were (and continue to be) essential for stocking reservoirs and rivers. Increased angling and commercial fishing pressures emphasized the demand for better management and facilities. Conservationists proposed that the money to fund a Sport Fish Restoration companion bill to Pittman-Robertson could come from an excise tax on fishing equipment and lures. The bill was introduced in 1939; however, contrary to then IAGFCC General Counsel Talbott Denmead’s, opinion that “In spite of wars, rumors of wars, sun spots, election and politics, the trend in fish and game legislation was upward,” the bill failed. It was not until after World War II that Michigan Congressman John Dingell and Colorado Senator Edwin “Big Ed” Johnson would revive the bill. President Harry S. Truman signed the Sport Fish Restoration Act (also known as Dingell-Johnson) into law on August 9, 1950. Credit: Arizona Game and Fish Department/George Andrejko 1100 C eSlteabtruatsi nRg ethveie Wwi ladnlifde Canodn Sspeorrvta Ftiisohn R Resetcoormatimone Pnrdoagtriaomns for the Gull-billed Tern funded mainly through Wildlife Restoration Funds and license revenues, populations of various subspecies of wild turkey are thriving in the 48 contiguous states and Hawaii. Today, the Eastern Wild Turkey population numbers more than 5.1 million birds. Pronghorn antelope, elk, wood duck, black bears and many others share similar success stories. Moreover, such increases in populations directly correlate to greater hunting opportunities. In 1937, deer hunting was prohibited These vital legislative efforts provided national funding mechanisms for conservation that remain the lifeblood of every state fish and wildlife agency. Since 1937, more than $14 billion dollars have been entrusted to state agencies through the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program for managing and restoring fish and wildlife and their habitats. Coupled with more than $1.2 billion total in annual license revenues reserved for the administration of state game and fish agencies, these funds have yielded unprecedented conservation success stories impacting not only fish and wildlife, but also untold generations of hunters, shooters, anglers, boaters and outdoor recreation enthusiasts. When the Wildlife Restoration Act was passed, there were fewer than 500,000 white-tailed deer in this country. Today, through enhanced habitat management and restoration efforts, there are more than 30 million animals and are at record numbers in almost every state where they are found. In the 1930s, there were approximately 30,000 wild turkeys. Through state restoration efforts in Kansas; New Jersey had only six deer hunting days available; and the deer population in Illinois was estimated at only 3,000 animals. Today, Kansas harvests roughly 100,000 deer each year; New Jersey has more than 160 deer hunting days available; and Illinois deer hunters harvest in excess of 188,000 animals each year. North Carolina and Ohio have had similar success. In 1972, the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission finally was able to establish a fall turkey season; in the spring of 1977, only 144 turkeys were reported harvested, however, by 2008, more than 10,400 were reported harvested. Ohio’s first turkey season took place in 1966 during which hunters harvested only 12 birds. In 2009, they took more than 20,700. Since 1950, state agency hatchery programs have been heavily supported by Sport Fish Restoration funds. Over the past 20 years, approximately 25 percent of Sport Fish Restoration funds have supported hatchery production and stocking. Sport Fish Restoration funds have also been used to improve tens Healthy bull elk in velvet; just one of many successful restoration efforts. Credit: Arizona Game and Fish Department/George Andrejko White-tailed deer populations increased. Credit: USFWS/Lori Bennett Wild turkeys now flourish in previously poor habitat. Credit: NEBRASKAland Magazine/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission The Wildlife and Sport Fish RNeastmorea toiofn S Percotgioranm 1111 of thousands of acres of waters diminished by siltation and pollution, which, in turn, has led to the recovery of America’s fishery resources. Techniques developed with research funded through the Sport Fish Restoration Program have resulted in striped bass stocking in reservoirs in almost every state and in many other countries worldwide. In South Carolina, research on striped bass in the Santee Cooper Reservoir System during the 1950s and 1960s led to a stocking program that has been implemented nationwide for land-locked striped bass. Yet, research and restoration is only half the story. With these excise tax-derived funds coupled with license dollars, state agencies have been able to provide hunter education to more than 24 million people; build hundreds of public shooting ranges; develop Walk-In Hunting Access programs; provide more than 22,000 public fishing sites; educate youth in schools about how conservation is funded; and deliver outdoor skills training to millions of Americans of all ages. Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration funds have also helped agencies acquire and maintain hundreds of millions of acres of habitat across the country as well as provide hunting, recreational shooting, fishing and boating access through leases, easements and purchases. These lands and waters are economic assets to both the states and local economies that depend on the more than $85 billion market force of hunters and anglers. We like to say that hunters and anglers pay for conservation in this country, which is clearly evident through the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program. However, we must also give tremendous credit to the industries that manufacture sporting good By working with private landowners who voluntarily enroll their land into walk-in access agreements through Private Lands Open to Sportsmen (PLOTS), the state is securing the hunting tradition and heritage in North Dakota. (Grant # ND W91L) Credit: North Dakota Game and Fish Department/Corey Wentland products and send their quarterly tax checks to the U. S. Treasury, often before those products are sold at the retail or wholesale level. It is a true partnership—from the sportsmen and-women who pay for the equipment and ammunition… to the industry that writes the checks… to the U.S. Department of the Treasury that collects the funds from industry… to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service that allocates them… to the state fish and wildlife agencies for on-the-ground conservation work and access that allows hunters, shooters, archers, anglers, and boaters greater opportunities to enjoy the activities they love best. But, what would happen if a link in this cycle of success were to break and the Wildlife and Sport Fish Programs lost? There would be an immediate loss of more than $800 million annually for fish and wildlife conservation. License fees would need to increase by at least 1122 C Selteabtruatsi nRg etvheie Wwi ladnlidfe Canodn sSeprovrta tFiiosnh RReesctoormatmione nPdroagtiroanms for the Gull-billed Tern 36 percent to recoup lost excise tax revenues. There would likely be a drop in hunting and fishing participation due to higher license fees. It is a future that could look too much like the now distant past. With the changing dynamics of federal and state legislative entities, state fish and wildlife agencies need the continued involvement of all partners in order to maintain support for the excise tax program and conservation. State legislation is a fluid issue and must be continuously reviewed for possible license revenue diversion issues. Likewise, it is imperative for state agencies to remember that activities and programs funded with Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration dollars must remain visible to both industry and legislative bodies; and that America’s sportsmen-and-women are, importantly, the first-line payers into the program. As we celebrate the 75th Anniversary of the Wildlife Restoration Program, let’s celebrate those who had the wisdom and foresight to create and advocate for the program that helps keep us in business—both Anglers, hunters, boaters, purchase fishing/hunting equipment and motor boat fuels. CYCLE OF SUCCESS Manufacturers pay excise tax on that equipment and boaters pay fuel taxes. U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service allocates funds to state fish and wildlife agencies. State agences implement programs and projects. Better fishing, boating, hunting and wildlife-associated recreation. 6 4 5 1 3 2 States receive grants. state fish and wildlife agencies and industry. Let’s recommit to the partnership among state fish and wildlife agencies, the hunting, shootings sports, angling and boating industries, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to ensure our great shared legacy passes down to tomorrow’s sportsmen-and- women. Hunters and anglers should take great pride in knowing that the states’ conservation success is the result of their continued contributions to America’s unique model of user-pay, everyone-benefits! References Outdoor Industry Association. 2012. The Outdoor Recreation Economy 2012. Belanger, Dian Olsen and Adrian Kinnane. 2002. Managing American Wildlife: A History of the International Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies. The International Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies POTENTIAL DIVERSION ISSUES OF STATE LICENSE REVENUES FY 2012 – 7 States FY 2011 – 3 States FY 2010 – 6 States After 75 years, states continue to face potential diversions of hunting and fishing license revenues. The increased fre-quency in diversion issues in recent years may be due to harsh economic times and statewide budget shortfalls. USFWS must continually monitor and audit state expenditures, and proposed state legisla-tion to protect funds. Federal and state agencies work in concert to rectify identified concerns. Source:USFWS Shepherd, Virginia. 2011. “A History of the Federal Aid to Wildlife Restoration Act.” Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries. Industry Pride in its CNoanmseerv oaft ioSne Ectfifoonrt s 1133 Industry Pride in Its Conservation Efforts Glenn Sapir, National Shooting Sports Foundation The firearms and ammunition industry is proud to be a leader and proud to be a partner When it comes to the unique history of conservation in the United States, the firearms and ammunition industry stands unabashedly proud of the leadership it showed in the establishment of the innovative Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program. Throughout the 75 years since the passage of the Pittman-Robertson Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act, the firearms and ammunition industry, represented since 1961 by its trade association, the National Shooting Sports Foundation® (NSSF®), has helped maximize the nation’s funding of each state’s wildlife management efforts and has worked with a variety of partners to help implement the internationally-envied North American Model for Wildlife Conservation. Numbers are one way of telling the story, an accounting that some call “the greatest story never told.” To help tell its story, the National Shooting Sports Foundation has distributed hundreds of thousands of Hunter’s Pocket Fact Cards throughout the country. The card provides fascinating statistics and describes some of the incredible results of an historic partnership among industry, sportsmen and -women, state and federal government and an array of sporting organizations. The numbers change upward daily, ensuring some measure of obsolescence almost immediately; however, the data included on the most recent edition of the card, revised in July 2011, are eye-opening nonetheless. Here are a few examples: • Sportsmen and -women contribute nearly $8 million every day, adding more than $2.9 billion each year for conservation. Some $749 million of that annual revenue is raised through excise taxes paid solely by sportsmen through the purchase of firearms, ammunition, archery gear, fishing tackle and boats. For 2009, for example, firearms and ammunition manufacturers contributed approximately $450 million to wildlife conservation through excise payments. [In 2011, the figure was $460 million, the greatest one-year amount in history.] • Hunters and target shooters [through the firearms and ammunition manufacturers] have paid $6.8 billion in excise taxes since the inception of the Pittman-Robertson Act in 1937. • In 1900, less than half a million white-tailed deer remained in the nation. Today, conservation programs have returned the white-tail population to some 32 million. Sportsmen and -women, whether at the range or in the field, are important partners in the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program. Credit: NSSF • 1901, few ducks remained. Today, there are 44 million populating the United States and Canada. • By the early 1900s, the nationwide population of wild turkeys was less than 100,000. Today, that population exceeds 7 million. • About 55 years ago, the pronghorn antelope population in the United States was only about 12,000. Now it is in excess of 1,100,000! State wildlife management agencies deserve the lion’s share of the credit for their professional management of wildlife resources, both game and nongame, within their borders. Their work, of course, is dependent Status Review and Conservation Recommendations for the Gull-billed Tern though perhaps not obvious, presented the potential for the firearms and ammunition industry to generate even more funding for wildlife conservation. “The bill strengthens wildlife conservation,” declared Lawrence G. Keane, NSSF senior vice president and general counsel, after the legislation was passed by Congress. “By enabling manufacturers to grow their business [by diverting funds from administrative and bank fees to reinvesting in manufacturing production], excise tax receipts will actually grow.” History commonly attributes 1937 to the start of the federal excise tax paid by the firearms and ammunition manufacturers on the products they manufacture. Actually, such an excise tax was initiated in 1932, but those funds were not earmarked for conservation purposes. It was the voice of the firearms and ammunition industry, along with other conservation-minded allies, that called for redirecting these taxes to benefit wildlife populations and assuring that these funds could not be redirected for other purposes. To preserve hunting as an American tradition and, thus, to help discourage any further moves toward nationwide gun control following passage of the National Firearms Act of 1934, the 14 Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program upon adequate financial resources, so it is with understandable pride that NSSF, on behalf of the firearms and ammunition industry, recognizes the contribution of its members and the sportsmen and -women they serve. Robert Scott, chairman of the board of governors of NSSF, said, “The wisdom and commitment to the conservation of our great natural resources displayed 75 years ago— and today—speaks volumes about the dedication, commitment and responsibility that the leaders of our industry have shown to our sports and to our great outdoors.” The Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act, passed in 1937, earmarked an excise tax of 10 percent on sporting long arms and ammunition, which was transferred from the federal treasury to state wildlife management agencies. During World War II the tax was raised to 11 percent and now yields about $310 million per year for wildlife conservation programs. The Dingell-Hart Bill was enacted in 1970, creating a 10 percent excise tax on handguns, which would fund wildlife restoration and hunter education. This measure produces an estimated $125 million per year. The firearms industry, the pioneer of this funding program, was joined by the archery community in 1972 when the Dingell-Goodling Bill, creating a similar, 11 percent excise tax on archery equipment, was passed. The Federal Aid in Sport Fish Restoration Act, enacted in 1950, commonly known as Dingell- Johnson after its Congressional sponsors, implemented a similar excise tax on fishing tackle, which yields an average of an additional $380 million annually. Payment of these excise taxes presents a financial burden on manufacturers, who must pay the tax after their goods are distributed but typically long before payments for these products have been received from retailers or distributors. Until 2010, the firearms and ammunition industry was required to adhere to a more frequent payment schedule than other industries contributing to the wildlife restoration program. The archery and fishing tackle industries always have made payment on a quarterly basis. However, the firearms industry, the trail-blazing participant of the cornerstone of the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation, had historically followed a bi-weekly payment schedule that required not only extra paperwork and staffing but also the necessity for some companies to incur debt to pay the excise tax for which they had not yet been reimbursed by their customers. In 2010, the Firearms Excise Tax Improvement Act resolved this issue by adjusting the firearms and ammunition manufacturers’ schedule to quarterly payments. This change, The sportsman and -women are an important partner in the firearms distribution chain, and thus a key contributor to wildlife conservation, not only by buying a firearm that has already contributed to the Wildlife Restoration Fund, but by purchasing hunting, fishing and trapping licenses that direct funds to the state’s wildlife and or fish management agencies. Credit: NSSF Hunters and target shooters, through the firearms and ammunition manufacturers, have paid $6.8 billion in excise taxes since the inception of the Pittman Roberston Act in 1937. Credit: NSSF Since 1970, a 10 percent excise tax on handguns has helped fund wildlife restoration and hunter education. The measure produces an estimated $125 million per year. Credit: NSSF Industry Pride in its CNoansmerev oatfi oSne Ectfifoornt s 15 25% 32% 34% 9% Wildlife Restoration Account Revenue Sources Pistols Firearms Ammo Archery Equipment Based on Annual Averages industry realized that its funding of conservation was necessary for the survival of our hunting heritage and the wildlife that inhabited the nation. “I can think of no other industry that took such a bold step, in the midst of such hard economic times, to unselfishly establish specific earmarks of the excise taxes paid on the first sale of every product to go to broad-based conservation of all species, game and nongame species alike,” said NSSF President and CEO Steve Sanetti. “Between excise taxes and licenses, sportsmen [and–women] pay for 75 percent of all wildlife and fishery management efforts in the nation, a record that no group can match. “Every hunter and target shooter should be immensely proud of the important part we play in our industry-established system of ‘user pays—everybody benefits,’” Sanetti added, “which is the envy of the world…” and the pride of the firearms and ammunition manufacturing industry. References: License sales. Source USFW: http:// wsfrprograms.fws.gov/Subpages/LicenseInfo/ LicenseIndex.htm Excise tax collections on firearms & ammunition. Source Alcohol & Tobacco Tax & Trade Bureau: http://www.ttb.gov/tax_audit/ tax_collections.shtml Excise tax collections on bow hunting and fishing products. Source Internal Revenue Service: http://www.irs.gov/taxstats/ article/0,,id=175900,00.html Duck & Wildlife Stamp revenues. Source USFW: http://www.fws.gov/duckstamps/ federal/sales/sales.htm Excise tax collection reports. Source USFW. 2011 Final Apportionment Wildlife Restoration Funds: $384 Million http://wsfrprograms.fws.gov/ Subpages/GrantPrograms/WR/ WRFinalApportionment2011.pdf 2011 Final Apportionment Sport Fish Restoration Funds: $365 Million http://wsfrprograms.fws. gov/Subpages/GrantPrograms/SFR/ SFRFinalApportionment2011.pdf Wildlife restoration apportionments 1939 – 2010. Source USFW: http://wsfrprograms. fws.gov/Subpages/GrantPrograms/WR/ WR_Funding.htm Bowhunter Magazine Deer Forecast 2009 http://www.docstoc.com/docs/22381806/2009- Bowhunter-Magazine-Deer-Forecast USFW Waterfowl Report Population Status 2011 http://www.flyways.us/sites/default/files/ uploads/statusreport2011_final.pdf National Wild Turkey Federation http://www. nwtf.org/for_hunters/all_about_turkeys.html Texas Parks & Wildlife 2007 https:// www2.tpwd.state.tx.us/business/feedback/ webcomment/ TTB http://www.ttb.gov/ tax_audit/tax_collections.shtml 1166 C Setleabtruasti nRge tvhiee wW ialdnlidfe C anodn sSeprovrta Ftiiosnh RReesctoormatmione nPdroagtrioamns for the Gull-billed Tern Name of Section 17 Radonski and the SFI to help. With SFI’s help, as well as sup-port from other conservation organizations, Breaux endorsed an alternative funding concept: gas tax revenues on the portion of fuel used in motorboats would be used to fund the expanded Sport Fish Restoration Program. Rep-resentative Breaux and his Senate colleague, Malcolm Wallop of Wy-oming introduced and shepherded the legislation through Congress. The Wallop-Breaux amendments, enacted in 1984, were designed to dramatically increase the amount of available funding for aquatic resource conservation programs Boating-Related Revenues Pack a Powerful Punch Boating-Related Revenues Pack a Powerful Funding Punch for Aquatic Conservation and Boating Infrastructure Programs Douglas Hobbs, Sport Fishing & Boating Partnership Council Coordinator, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Ryck Lydecker, Assistant Vice President for Government Affairs, Boat Owners Association of The United States The effort to expand funding for the Sport Fish Restoration Pro-gram began more than 30 years ago. The genesis of how this expansion would eventually be funded started innocently enough on a fishing trip on Pennsylvania’s Juniata River, which included a member of Congress and the head of a respected fishery conserva-tion organization. Today, the leg-islation and subsequent amend-ments and bills that came about thanks to a conversation between a couple of anglers power not only aquatic resource conserva-tion efforts but also programs designed to increase recreational angling and boating opportunities on America’s waterways. The member of Congress on that long ago fishing trip was then-Rep-resentative John Breaux of Louisi-ana and his angling partner was Gil Radonski, president of the Sport Fishing Institute (SFI). An avid boater and angler since childhood, Breaux was seeking an alternative source of funding to dramatically expand the original 1950 Sport Fish Restoration Program funded under Dingell-Johnson. He wanted to contribute more to the sport he loved. As Radonski recounts, Con-gressman Breaux lamented that the bill he had introduced to capture revenue from an excise tax on boats and their motors, to be used to pro-vide additional monies for the Sport Fish Restoration Program, was not getting any support from his Con-gressional colleagues. He asked and for greater recreational op-portunities for anglers and boat-ers. Subsequent revisions created additional funding sources to support this country’s aquatic re-sources and provide better fishing and boating opportunities for the American people. Boating-related revenues pump up conservation funding In the broadest sense possible, Wallop-Breaux was critical because it brought boaters and the revenues they generated into the Sport Fish Restoration Program fold. For more than 30 years, Sport Fish Restoration Credit:RBFF Motorboat fuel tax is a major source of funding for the Sport Fish Restoration Program. Credit: RBFF 18 C Setleabtruast iRnge tvhiee wW ialdnldife C aonnd sSeprovrat tFiiosnh RReesctoormatmioen nPdraogtiroanms for the Gull-billed Tern had been funded through excise taxes on sport fishing equipment. However, this funding model did not take into account the fact that many anglers fished from motor-powered boats. It was a natural fit to bring recreational boaters into the Sport Fish Restoration community. Aside from the alliance it created between anglers and boaters, per-haps the most important aspect of the Wallop-Breaux legislation was that, in its first year, ap-portionments were made under the provisions of the legislation and funding apportioned to the States increased from $35 million in 1985 to almost $110 million in 1986. The newly- created Boating Access Program directly benefit-ted recreational boaters because it provided a dedicated funding source States could use to build and maintain boat ramps and associated infrastructure. The legislation also enabled States to use funds for Aquatic Resources Education programs. Finally, the law called for equitable funding between saltwater and freshwater projects. Building on success: Program Expansion Benefits Anglers, Boaters and Aquatic Resources Building on the successful 1984 legislation, Congress passed subsequent laws expanding both program funding and support for the improvement and/or construc-tion of boating infrastructure, such as docks and sanitary sewage pumpouts, as well as the promotion of boating safety. The 1988 Wallop-Breaux reau-thorization and amendments not only supported boater safety education, but also funded much-needed research to verify the actual percentage of fuel taxes collected each year directly at-tributable to recreational boaters, since this would determine the revenues available for use by the Sport Fish Restoration Program. In 1990, Congress expanded the portion of fuel taxes deposited in the program, increased funding by adding taxes from small gaso-line engines and funded coastal wetlands protection and restora-tion programs. In 1992, Congress enacted the Clean Vessel Act, which pro-vides grants to States to install and maintain sanitary sewage pumpouts for use by recreational boaters, and also increased funding available for improving boating access facilities. Also, in 1998, the Boating Infrastructure Grant Program was enacted. It funds grants to States and the private sector to provide docks and other boating infrastruc-ture for non-trailerable boats. Congress also further enhanced boating safety programs, in-creased funds available for boat-ing access, captured more gas tax for use by the program, and created and funded the National Outreach and Communications program. The most recent major enhancements to the program occurred in 2005, when Congress expanded the Sport Fish fund by approximately $110 million by capturing all remaining fuel taxes attributable to motorboat and small engine use that was be-ing diverted for other purposes. (American Sportfishing Associa-tion; National Marine Manufac-turer’s Association, 2005). Case Studies: Examples of benefits to the angling and boating public Sport fishing is serious busi-ness in Florida and, as so many anglers attest, when it comes to sport fishing, the largemouth bass reigns supreme. Large-mouth bass, the Florida subspe-cies, grows faster and larger than its bass cousins elsewhere. Therefore, it puts up quite a fight and poses a greater challenge to anglers. In 2002, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Com-mission started planning to transform an old hatchery, the Richloam State Fish Hatchery, into a modern state-of-the-art rearing facility. Five years later, the state unveiled the Florida Bass Conservation Center (FBCC) with a mission “to conduct and utilize essential research to optimize produc-tion, stocking and recruitment of Florida largemouth bass to facilitate integrated conserva-tion management of Florida’s freshwater fisheries resources.” A significant portion of the project was funded through the Sport Fish Restoration program and came from revenues col-lected from a special excise tax on fishing tackle and motorboat fuels. In essence, it is the anglers who so enjoy Florida’s waters who pay for the upkeep of those very waters - and the FBCC promises great returns on their investment. Today, the FBCC is the state’s major freshwater fish production hatchery, supplying largemouth bass and other fish 57% 15% 7% 6% 0.5% 14.5% Sport Fish and Boating Trust Fund Revenue Sources Motorboat Gas Small Engine Gas Interest Imports Electronic Outboard Motors Domestic Fishing Based on Annual Averages Equipment Boating-Related Revenues PaNcka am Peo wofe rSfuelc Ptiuonnc h 1199 such as crappie, catfish, bream, triploid grass carp, striped bass, and sunshine bass. Thanks to the Center, Florida anglers still enjoy their stature as members of the “Fishing Capital of the World,” as they wrestle to reel in home-grown trophies. Aquatic resources education in Minnesota helps develop future conservationists Minnesota has a rich fishing heritage, with more than two million people fishing its waters and contributing approximately $2 billion each year to the state’s economy. Recognizing that recreational fishing and hunting can create strong connections to the environment, the Min-nesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR) developed the Fishing: Get in the Habitat! Min-nAqua Leader’s Guide for use by educators in formal and non-formal educational settings. The guide aims to increase students’ understanding of Minnesota fish, aquatic resources, and resource management; involve students in water-related service learning projects; and connect students to their local aquatic resources through the recreational activity of angling. Angling skills passed on to a new generation. Credit:USFWS/Lori Bennett Lessons and activities provide angling and environmental edu-cation opportunities for schools, web-based education programs, non-traditional schools, com-munity park and recreation programs, youth program lead-ers, nature centers, museums, sporting groups, environmental learning centers, state agencies, watershed districts, fisheries resources and management educators, and any organization conducting academic, standards based, science, outdoor, envi-ronmental, natural resources, conservation and/or outdoor recreational education program-ming for children. The program accommodates multiple learning styles through the differen-tiation and diversity of lesson activities. Through funding from the Sport Fish Restoration Program, Minnesota and other States are actively engaging the public in order to raise awareness of the importance of conserving our nation’s aquatic resources. Boating Access: Recovering from Disaster In September, 2003, Hurricane Isabel roared up the Chesapeake Bay leaving havoc in its wake. One of the casualties it left be-hind was the boating access facil-ity on the York River in Glouces-ter Point, Virginia. The facility, which was 90 percent destroyed, had been a key point of access for recreational boaters and anglers for not only the York River but also the wide-open waters of the lower Chesapeake Bay. How-ever, thanks to core funding of $685,282 from the Sport Fish Restoration funds matched with $228,428 from other sources, a $913,710 facility was constructed and was ready for the 2006 prime boating season. Two accessible piers were constructed as well as a 9,237 square yard parking lot capable of handling 69 car/trailer combinations. Other amenities including restroom facilities and walkways – all handicapped ac-cessible – were added. To protect the environment, erosion and sediment control devices were in-stalled and sensitive submerged aquatic vegetation established. “Most weekends, the facility is filled to capacity,” said James Ad-ams of the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries, “and during certain fish migra-tion times the facility is filled to capacity for several weeks at a time.” The Boating Access provisions included in the 1984 Wallop-Breaux legislation made this and other boating access projects possible. Access for Transient Boaters: Boating Infrastructure Grant Program When the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency started talk-ing about a water trail through the state in 1999, it was not thinking about canoes, kayaks and cartop boats. It was thinking big, as in 800 miles of designated rivers and waterways; big, as in accommodating vessels up to 100 feet and longer; and BIG, as in the federal Boating Infra-structure Grant (BIG) program. After a series of BIG-funded projects along its route, to build dedicated transient facilities for cruisers, the agency declared the Tennessee Boating Trail complete. Seven BIG-funded projects built in partnership with private marinas, state parks and municipal governments in Tennessee helped create the water trail. With a total of eleven BIG-funded transient projects on the Tennessee and Cumber-land rivers now complementing the commercial marinas already available, boaters have tie-up facilities that are never more than an easy day cruise apart-- about six hours, maximum, at typical trawler cruising speeds. These BIG projects are at a major crossroads for boaters cruising the Great Loop—the increasingly popular water route around the entire eastern United States via inland rivers, the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic Ocean, major coastal tributaries, and the Great Lakes—and provide critical boating facilities along the way. 2200 C Setleabtruast iRnge tvhiee wW ialdnldife C aonnd sSeprovrat tFiiosnh RReesctoormatmioen nPdraogtiroanms for the Gull-billed Tern 20 Clean water needed: Clean Vessel Act Protects Alaska’s Coastal Waters Juneau, Alaska’s Aurora Harbor marina faced a dilemma common to many other marinas in the United States. Pumpout equip-ment had been installed in years past; however, its location on the fuel dock meant that boats only used the service when re-fueling. Often, boaters not needing fuel either were reluctant to occupy that space or did not want to wait for access to the pumpout. Using a $100,000 Clean Vessel Act grant, Juneau installed a new system powered by a single pump, which provided five new connec-tions along the harbor’s main float, every 140 feet. Today, boat owners with assigned slips near the main float are able to pump out their holding tanks without ever leaving their slips. Other boaters, including transients, are able to temporarily moor in specially designated zones to service their holding tanks without blocking the fuel dock or other boats. With installation of the new pumpout equipment at the new location, boaters can properly dispose of their sewage, thereby reducing discharge of untreated sewage into Alaska’s coastal waters. A Successful and On-Going Legacy All Americans have reason to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program. Since pas-sage of the original legislation to expand funding for the Sport Fish Restoration Program and subsequent program revisions, funding apportioned to the States for the program has grown from roughly $35 million in 1985 to more than $400 million in 2009. Critical not only to the future of aquatic resource conserva-tion, the funding also supports improved recreational opportu-nities for boaters and anglers. Programs like CVA, BIG and Boating Access have provided Posters and postcard images designed by USFWS to convey WSFR program benefits and partners. Credit: RBFF real benefits to the angling and boating public through the instal-lation of approximately 3,800 coastal pumpout facilities and more than 2,200 inland pumpout facilities. Some 3,500 facilities have been maintained through the CVA program to ensure boat-ers can do their part to maintain clean water. Since the inception of the Boating Access provisions of the Sport Fish Restoration Program, new boating access construction has taken place at more than 3,800 sites and renova-tion or improvement of boating access at more than 7,400 sites. By uniting the economic resourc-es generated by the recreational endeavors, conservation leaders such as John Breaux, Malcolm Wallop and Gil Radonski created a conservation legacy that is still paying dividends to not only anglers and boaters, but to the entire American public. Name of Section 21 from just knowing a resource ex-ists, although they may not actu-ally experience it first-hand, such as, protecting an endangered spe-cies in the Arctic. Option values include not only the availability of wildlife for current use but also its continued availability for future use. The benefits accrued from preserving natural resources for future generations are known as bequest values. Total economic value is the sum of all use and nonuse values. Net economic value is measured as participants’ “willingness to pay” for outdoor recreation over and above what they actually spend to participate. The benefit to society is the summation of willingness-to- pay across all individuals. A price is society’s way of placing values on the goods it wants to consume. How high the price is depends on how much consumer demand there is for the product and how much of it can be pro-duced at that price. The cost of a recreational trip serves as an implicit price for outdoor recre-ation since a market price gener-ally does not exist for this type of activity. All other factors being equal, the lower the cost per trip, the more trips recreationists will take. An individual demand curve gives the number of trips a recreationist will take per year for each different cost per trip. A downward sloping demand curve represents marginal willingness to pay per trip and indicates that each additional trip is valued less than the previous trip. By total-ing the net economic values of all individuals who participate in an activity, we derive its value to society. Economists have developed Valuing the Benefits of Wildlife Anna Harris, Economist U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service During the 19th Century, America saw a dramatic demographic shift. In 1820 only 5 percent of the U.S. population resided in urban areas; by the late 1800s, it exceeded 20 percent, and some feared America was losing her pioneering spirit and becoming too urban. With the onset of this migration, re-source exploitation of America’s wildlife created a catalyst for con-servation, as described in detail throughout this publication. A Total Valuation Framework for Wildlife Economists usually value wildlife resources from the point of view of society as a whole. Economic value is determined in terms of maximum willingness to pay or minimum compensation demand-ed. Recreational expenditures can be used to understand local eco-nomic impacts, but these, alone, are not a satisfactory measure of the economic value of wildlife to society as a whole. To calculate the total economic value of outdoor recreation, econ-omists measure both “use values” and “nonuse values.” Use values are generated when management decisions affect the enjoyment people get from current use of wildlife and include direct as well as indirect use. Direct use values include activities such as hunting, fishing and wildlife observation; indirect use considers personal enjoyment of wildlife without direct interaction such as reading a book about wildlife. Nonuse values are generated when management decisions affect possibilities for future use and consist of existence, option, and bequest values. Existence val-ues are the benefits people receive U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Bait 2011 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation “Wildlife-associated recreation not only sustains our spirit and con-nects us to each other and the natu-ral world, but also provides signifi-cant financial support for wildlife conservation in our nation’s econo-my. According to information from the latest national survey, 90 million Americans, 38 percent of the U.S. population whom are 16 years and older, participated in wildlife-related recreation in 2011 and spent almost $145 billion dollars. This spending supports thousands of jobs in indus-tries and businesses connected to fishing, hunting and the observance of wildlife.” ~Dan Ashe, USFWS Valuing the Benefits of Wildlife 21 2222 CSetlaebturast iRnge vthieew W ailndldif eC aonn Sspeorrvt aFtiisohn R Resetcooramtimone Pnrdoagtriaomns for the Gull-billed Tern QUICK FACTS FROM THE 2011 NATIONAL SURVEY OF FISHING, HUNTING, AND WILDLIFE-ASSOCIATED RECREATION Wildlife-Related Recreationists: 2011 33.1 million anglers 13.7 million hunters 71.8 million wildlife watchers In 2011, 90.1 million U.S. recreationists spent $145 billion on their fishing, hunting, and wildlife watching (closely observing, feeding, and photographing wildlife). 3 8 19 22 18 18 12 Percent of Anglers by Age Group 16 and 17 18 to 24 25 to 34 35 to 44 45 to 54 55 to 64 65 and older Source: 2011 National Survey 3 9 15 18 23 21 11 Percent of Hunters by Age Group 16 and 17 18 to 24 25 to 34 35 to 44 45 to 54 55 to 64 65 and older Source: 2011 National Survey Anglers Pursing Selected Fish by Type of Fishing (Numbers in millions) Fish sought Number of anglers Percent Anglers, total 33.1 100 Freshwater except Great Lakes 27.1 82 Black bass 10.6 32 Panfish 7.3 22 Trout 7.2 22 Catfish/bullhead 7.0 21 Great Lakes 1.7 5 Walleye, sauger 0.6 2 Black bass (largemouth) 0.6 2 Perch 0.5 2 Salmon 0.4 1 Saltwater 8.9 27 Striped bass 2.1 6 Flatfish (flounder, halibut) 2.0 6 Red drum (redfish) 1.5 5 Sea trout (weakfish) 1.1 3 Hunters Pursuing Selected Game by Type of Hunting (Numbers in millions) Game sought Number of hunters Percent Hunters, total 13.7 100 Big game 11.6 85 Deer 10.9 79 Wild turkey 3.1 23 Elk 0.9 6 Bear 0.5 4 Small game 4.5 33 Squirrel 1.7 12 Rabbit, hare 1.5 11 Pheasant 1.5 11 Quail 0.8 6 Migratory birds 2.6 19 Ducks 1.4 10 Doves 1.3 9 Geese 0.8 6 Name of Section 23 are visible during the fall migra-tion. Home to some 270 species of birds, including threatened and endangered species, Crex Mead-ows is a hub of biodiversity. Purchases for the prairie and marshland began in 1945. At present, Wisconsin DNR owns 28,019 acres of the 31,094 acres proposed to create Crex. Pitt-man- Robertson funds helped leverage the effort; the average annual cost of acquisition, habitat development, maintenance, and general operations was approxi-mately $1.9 million (2009 dol-lars). The state matched these expenditures with an additional 25 percent. Twenty-five percent of all visitors come to Crex to hunt or trap deer, bear, waterfowl, and a variety of small game. In Wis-consin, the average deer hunter spends $28 per day on trip-related expenditures including food, lodging, and transportation. Each year, on opening day for white-tail deer at Crex, about 550 hunters take to the field. In 2009, deer hunters spent an estimated $15,400 in trip-related expendi-tures. Along with deer, Crex offers stated preference techniques to assess participants’ “willingness to pay” for outdoor recreation. The demand curve approach uses both expressed preference methods and revealed preference methods to find the maximum amount a person would be willing to pay for a service. The National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation, conducted for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service by the U.S. Census Bureau, asks contingent valuation questions to find an individual’s “willingness to pay” for participation in outdoor recre-ation. Contingent valuation is one technique widely used to measure user values. The National Survey asked anglers, hunters and wild-life watchers about the number of recreational trips taken in 2006 and the average cost per trip. Respondents were then asked how much money would have been too much to pay per trip. This question, in a different form, was asked again in case there had been a misunderstanding. As-suming a linear demand curve, annual net economic value can be calculated using the difference be-tween current cost and the maxi-mum costs at the intercept, (i.e. the “choke price”) in combination with the number of recreational trips taken. Contingent valuation data from the National Survey are studied only to determine use values and do not measure non-use values. Public Use Values for Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Projects The net economic benefits of wildlife-related recreation vary considerably depending on the particular site and the activity involved. Wildlife-recreationists differ widely according to income, activity, skill, knowledge, and other personal factors. Even the places we decide to explore differ in location, scenery, time of year, accessibility, and other factors. To approximate the likely range of user values for each of the fol-lowing examples, use estimates derived from similar activities in the same state are applied. The $14 billion, approximately $25 billion 2012 dollars, (See Apportionment Data, Appendix) spent on restoration and manage-ment does not entirely reflect the national economic benefits of wildlife management attributable to the 75-year-old Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program. Although it is not possible to put a value on all the wildlife restora-tion projects funded in part by WSFR monies, a representative sample demonstrates the pro-gram’s success. Big Game Hunting: Crex Meadows Wildlife Management Area, Wisconsin Crex Meadows, at 30,000 acres, is one of the largest state-owned wildlife areas in Wisconsin. Origi-nally part of the Wisconsin Pine Barrens, Crex is now the state’s largest remaining portion of this sensitive savanna community. As a result of intense wetland and prairie restoration practices, 22 miles of dikes now flood 6,000 acres of marsh. Extensive pre-scribed burning is conducted annually for habitat improvement. Today, more than 9,000 sandhill cranes use Crex as a staging area and thousands of ducks and geese Valuing the Benefits of Wildlife 23 Sandhill cranes are just one of the migratory bird species found at Crex Meadows. Credit: NEBRASKAland Magazine/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission 24 Status Review and Conservation Recommendations for the Gull-billed Tern $80,000, of which approximately $48,000 each year was financed by Pittman-Robertson funds. Hunters in Georgia bagged 27,323 turkeys in 2009 during 1.2 million hunting days. Using aver-age daily expenditures for food, lodging, transportation, and fees for Georgia hunters, it is esti-mated that hunters seeking wild turkey spent about $31 million (in 2009 dollars). Contingent valuation estimates were not available for wild turkey per se, but turkey (and deer) is considered big game in the 2006 Survey. Contingent value esti-mates for deer hunting is about Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program some of Wisconsin’s best bear and waterfowl hunting. Estimated net economic benefits for hunting in 2009 at Crex totaled nearly $2.6 million, based on a value per day of $87. The benefits accrued from just 25 percent of wildlife-recre-ationists at Crex demonstrate the powerful economic effect wildlife recreation can have on an area in a single year with minimal invest-ment. Wild Turkeys: Georgia North America’s wild turkey population was nearly extirpated in the early 1900s due to habitat degradation and unregulated market hunting. As recently as 1973, Georgia’s estimated wild turkey populations numbered only 17,000 birds. That same year, Georgia DNR began an intensive turkey restocking program. Concluding in 1996, the program has restored the bird to most of its original range, with the population now numbered at some 300,000 birds. In 1980, the average annual cost of the restoration program was about Today, more than 7 million birds thrive throughout North America, thanks to the efforts of conservation partners. Credit: NEBRASKAland Magazine/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission Figure 1 Name of Section observed. Since its inception, waterfowl hunting has also been an important activity at Fountain Grove. Goose hunting for Canada, White-fronted and snow geese continues to be a popular pastime in north central Missouri. Hunters bagged an average of 1.29 Canada geese per day during the month-long prescribed wa-terfowl season in 2011. More than 1,700 hunters visited Fountain Grove Conservation Area during the regular duck season, spending a total of about $95,000. The National Survey no longer determines contingent valuation estimates for waterfowl hunting. However, these questions were asked in the 1985 Survey and, adjusting for inflation, the data gathered gives an estimated net economic benefit for waterfowl hunting at Fountain Grove in 2011 of $82,156, based on a value of $46 per day. Waterfowl hunting is one example of the difficulty in isolating the benefits of a single project from other national wildlife manage-ment efforts. Visitors to Fountain Grove and similar sites enjoy the benefits of wildlife management projects in distant locations that provide habitat and food for mi- $58 per day (2009 dollars) for Georgia state residents and $63 for non-residents (2009 dollars). Using a value of $61 per day gives estimated net economic benefits of hunting wild turkeys in Georgia in 2009 of about $70.1 million. It is an interesting aside that tur-key hunting is increasing in popu-larity at a time when participation in most other forms of hunting is decreasing. Figure 1 demon-strates the significant increase in the number of days hunters in Georgia sought wild turkey. The relationship of estimated ben-efits to costs of this program is remarkable. The dollars used for restoration over the entire life of the turkey restoration program are far less than the net economic benefits of hunting wild turkeys in Georgia in 2009 alone. Waterfowl Hunting: Fountain Grove Conservation Area, Missouri Fountain Grove Conservation Area was the first wetland man-agement area developed by the Missouri Conservation Commis-sion. It is an important migra-tion stop for a variety of wildlife. Sitting in the floodplain of the Grand River, Pittman-Robertson funds assisted in the purchase of the initial 3,433 acres in 1947 for $6.2 million (2011 dollars). As a result of extensive clear-ing, draining, and cultivation of surrounding wetlands, Fountain Grove gradually deteriorated into a silting basin for increasingly constricted river flows, signifi-cantly degrading the wetlands. In view of declining duck populations and other considerations in 1960, the Missouri Conservation Com-mission decided to develop the area primarily as goose habitat. Acquisitions have expanded the management area to its present size of 7,154 acres. There are significant public uses of Fountain Grove for a variety of outdoor recreation activities. The area is managed to provide diverse wetland habitats, includ-ing marshes, bottomland forests, grain fields, oxbow lakes, and sloughs. Throughout the win-ter, bald eagles are commonly Valuing the Benefits of Wildlife 25 gratory populations. Some of the benefits of investments at Foun-tain Grove really belong to other projects elsewhere, but some of the costs at Fountain Grove are offset as well by benefits at other sites. Nonconsumptive Uses: Swan Island Wildlife Management Area, Maine Swan Island is one of only two state-owned wildlife management areas in Maine where camping is allowed and education pro-grams are provided for visitors. Abundant migrating waterfowl, wild turkeys, white-tailed deer, and bald eagles provide excellent wildlife watching opportunities on the Island. In the 1940s the Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife, through the use of Pittman-Robertson funds, began buying Swan Island farms. Since becoming state operated, Swan Island’s existing township remains relatively unaltered. In fact, a number of the original buildings still stand and, in 1995, the Maine Historic Preservation Commission successfully had Swan Island listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Each year, from the first day of May through Labor Day in Despite widespread drought, USFWS reported record numbers of waterfowl with an es-timated population totaling 48.6 million in spring 2012 in the traditional survey areas. Credit: Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries 26 C Setleabtruast iRnge tvhiee wW Ialndldif eC aonnds Seprovrat tFioisnh RReesctoomramtioenn Pdraotgiroanms for the Gull-billed Tern September, some 3,000 to 4,000 visitors come to Swan Island. An-nual revenue from public use fees have ranged from a low of $5,000 to a high of $18,000. In 2009, the operating cost was approximately $96,500, with about $16,700 re-ceived in visitor fees. Wildlife observation is the major recreational use on Swan Island. With an average of 3,500 visitors in 2009, the value of Swan Island for wildlife-associated recreation is $336,000, based on a value per year of $90. Swan Island’s operat-ing costs are about a quarter of the net economic benefits of wildlife observation. Fishing and Nonconsumptive Uses: Skagit Wildlife Management Area, Washington The Skagit Wildlife Management Area is located on the Skagit Bay estuary and consists of 16,700 acres of intertidal mud flats and marsh. Four hundred and fifty acres are in agricultural food plots for use by waterfowl. Currently, the principal project involves enhancement and restoration of degraded habitats to help threat-ened Chinook salmon popula-tions recover. The recent federal Endangered Species Act listing of Chinook salmon as threatened in the Skagit watershed is shift-ing management priorities of the Skagit Wildlife Management Area. The Skagit River system was once home to one of the largest runs of wild Chinook salmon in Puget Sound. By 1999, how-ever, the number of returning wild spawning spring Chinook had dropped below 500 fish and the National Marine Fisheries Service listed Puget Sound Chi-nook as “threatened” under the Endangered Species Act. The major recreation uses of Skagit include waterfowl hunting, fishing, wildlife observation, hik-ing, boating, and kayaking. Be-cause of its proximity to Seattle and other population centers, the Skagit has become one of the more important publicly-owned wildlife areas in Washington State, with 110,065 use days in 2005. The land acquisitions for Skagit Wildlife Management Area were made thanks to a variety of fund-ing sources, including $122,000 in Pittman-Robertson funds in the 1950s, as well as land exchange agreements with Bureau of Reclamation, general state funds, and private donations. Currently, 75 percent of operation and main-tenance costs are funded with P-R money. Fishing values have been esti-mated from the 2006 Survey. Public use for this activity was 8,300 fishing days, with related visitor expenditures of $260,000. Non-consumptive use of the Skagit Wildlife Management Area was nearly 77,350 days in 2005. Total expenditures for wildlife observation, the most prominent non-consumptive use on Skagit, exceeded $1 million. Estimated net economic benefits of trout fishing were $207,500, based on a value per day of $25. It is also possible to estimate the net economic benefits of non-consumptive uses from the 2006 Survey. Wildlife watching yields an estimated $1.9 million in economic benefits, based on a value of $25 per day. Estimated net economic benefits of fishing and non-consumptive use on the Skagit totaled $2.1 million in 2006. Conclusion Hunting in Alaska is a dream-come- true for most big game hunters. Bison, one of the last iconic animals of the American West, are legally hunted in certain areas of the State. Each year roughly 15,000 hunters apply for 100 permits, and on average about 74 bison are harvested. The bag limit for residents is one bison every ten years and non-residents may only bag one animal per lifetime. Due to the small number of tags available, combined with the mystical attraction and zeal for the animal, out-of-state hunt-ers are willing to pay upwards of $5,000 for this chance of a lifetime to hunt bison in Alaska. These examples demonstrate that the benefits from Pittman- Robertson and Dingell-Johnson funded projects have been very large relative to the modest public investments which estab-lished and maintain them. Much of the economic impact goes to rural areas, with relatively de-pressed local economies, so that expenditures of visitors to these areas improve the distribution of economic activity in the nation as a whole. The examples discussed in this section represent typical wildlife management program use values and benefits. There are instances, such as bison hunting in Alaska, which demonstrate dramatic success stories. Because of the number of visitors to these sites, the total annual benefits of wildlife-related recreation are quite large relative to costs in each case. It’s important to keep in mind that we only quantified part of the public use benefits in each area, and have done noth-ing with existence, option and bequest values. Some studies Credit: Missouri Department of Natural Resources Valuing theN Baemneefi otsf oSf eWctilidolnif e 2277 have estimated these non-user values at roughly twice the size of user values. If this is true, then our traditional emphasis on hunting-related expenditures and user values may have led to gross understatements of the actual value of wildlife resources to the Nation. References Decker, Daniel J. and Gary R. Goff. 1987. Valuing Wildlife- Economic and Social Perspectives. Colorado: Westview Press Inc. Freeman, Chris. “Data Request for Use Values at Fountain Grove.” Personal Com-munications 03/14/2012. The 2011 Survey estimates that over 17% of the 71.8 million wildlife watchers participated in away-from-home wildlife photography. Credit: Christina Triantafilidis Garrett, John, Belinda Schuster and Donna Gleisner. 2006. “Skagit Wildlife Area Management Plan.” Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. Hoffman, Steven. “Data Request for Use Values at Crex M eadows.” Personal Com-munications 12/15/2011. Johnson, Reed. 1980. “Wildlife Benefits and Economic Values.” In Harmon Killman, ed. 1987. Restoring America’s Wildlife, 1937-1987: The First 50 Years of the Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration (Pittman-Robertson) Act. U.S. Depart-ment of Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service. Martin, Roland. 2010. “L.D. 398- Resolve, To Develop a Management Plan for the Nonwildlife Components of Sawn Island and Little Sawn Island in Perkins Town-ship, Sagadahoc County.” A Report to the Joint Standing Committee on Inland Fisheries and Wildlife., Maine. U.S. Department of Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service and U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. 2006 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation. Is-sued October, 2007. 2288 C Setleabturast iRnge tvhiee wW ialdnldif eC aonnd sSeprovrat tFioisnh RReesctoormatmioenn Pdraogtiroanms for the Gull-billed Tern Name of Section 29 including college graduates. For example, in Wyoming, fishery management crews were employed to conduct watershed surveys to measure species’ distributions and abundance to reduce the need for fish stocking (Wiley 1995). To see some of the best projects achieved across the country using SFR funding, one only has to examine the Outstanding SFR awards presented annually by the Fisheries Administration Section of the American Fisheries Society. Winners constitute a “Who’s Who” list of innovation, creativity, and application in fisheries management and development, research and surveys, and aquatic education using SFR funds. SFR funds are used to support a wide variety of programs, projects, and activities, but there are some standard uses of the funds that occur in most states. Many states have been able to build and operate new state-of-the-art fish hatcheries because of SFR funding. All states use SFR funds to monitor fish populations and assess how management practices influence their recruitment, growth, and mortality. Studies of human influences on fish populations, particularly angling, are also important SFR-funded activities, typically evaluated through angler creel surveys. Data collected are used to implement and evaluate regulations, establish harvest quotas, and document constituent demographics, behaviors, and opinions. Property has been purchased or leased, developed, operated, and maintained with SFR funds, and aquatic habitat has been preserved, restored, and enhanced Reliable Funding Source Benefits America’s Sport Fisheries Don Gabelhouse, Fisheries Administrator Nebraska Game and Parks Commission Today, 62 years after legislation was passed to create the Dingell- Johnson program, state fish and wildlife agencies are accustomed to receiving DJ/Wallop-Breaux Sport Fish Restoration (SFR) apportionments. We probably take the program for granted, because it has been a constant, reliable funding source for more than 60 years. Perhaps the best way to portray the importance of the SFR program to state fish and wildlife agencies is to imagine what our programs might look like today without it, and consider all of the great things that would not have been accomplished if these funds were not available. Without the SFR program, we would be looking at significantly smaller state agency budgets. A survey of state fish and wildlife agencies in 2001 found that SFR funding constituted an average of 44 percent of inland fisheries program expenditures in the 41 states responding (Gabelhouse 2005). This percentage ranged from 11 percent in Missouri to 75 percent in Hawaii, Indiana, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, and Texas. The face of fisheries management would look far different today in most states, without the SFR program. Your state’s 1950 guide to fishing regulations will remind you about what fisheries management amounted to before the DJ program began. How many of the differences between then and now are due to advances made possible because of the SFR program? Perhaps most importantly, the DJ program provided the resources that allowed state fish and wildlife agencies to hire more employees, in both marine and freshwater environments. Man-made impoundments have been built, including fish-friendly features, thanks to the SFR program, and angling and boating access have been established and improved. Although most of the research conducted with SFR funding is applied, information generated from basic research on fish life history, behavior, genetics, and ecology is sometimes required to manage fish populations effectively. Such research would often not be accomplished if funding were limited to just fishing license/ permit revenues. Since 1950, a 10% excise tax on sport fishing equipment has helped fund America’s fisher-ies. Credit: NEBRASKAland Magazine/Ne-braska Game and Parks Comission Credit: Missiouri Department of Natural Resources. Reliable Funding Source Benefits America’s Sport Fisheries 30 Status Review and Conservation Recommendations for the Gull-billed Tern While the SFR program provides up to 75 percent of project costs, the 25 percent non-federal match can be an important obstacle for some state fisheries programs. A significant decrease in the numbers of anglers will impact the amount of revenue available from fishing license and permit sales. Given the dependence most state fisheries programs have on those funds, it is sometimes daunting for a state to achieve its matching funds requirement Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program in order to fund all that could or should be done, if the state lacks the necessary operating budget. Today, as is the case with many other underfunded programs, it often takes partnerships for SFR to be completely effective. Needed work can still be accomplished despite austere state budgets if non-federal partners are willing to provide the matching funds. Additionally, SFR program support may be even more important in the future if angler numbers continue to decline and revenue from fishing licenses and permits does not keep pace with inflation. Twenty years ago, outreach, marketing, and promotion were not considered important components of most state fisheries programs; rather, the “build it and they will come” philosophy prevailed. Today, considerable effort is directed toward understanding, communicating with, educating, influencing, recruiting, developing, and retaining anglers and other constituents. SFR funding helps pay for many of these efforts. As we continue to face new challenges, such as the appearance of new aquatic invasive species, habitat fragmentation, global climate change, and ever-increasing competition for water, funding through the SFR program remains vital. To maintain this program, as well as our base funding, we need to do a better job of communicating how our work, with help from the SFR program, not only benefits American fisheries, but also our quality of life. References Gabelhouse, D.W., Jr. 2005. Staffing, spending, and funding of state inland fisheries programs. Fisheries 30:10-17. Wiley, R.W. 1995. A common sense protocol for the use of hatchery-reared trout. American Fisheries Society Symposium 15:465-471. Lake Wanahoo, a Lower Platte North Resource District reservoir near Wahoo Lake nearly full with construction underway on recreation facilities. (Grant # NE F162B) Credit: NEBRASKAland Magazine/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission Brenda Pracheil, biologist, scans the rostrum of a paddlefish netted below Fort Randall Dam to determine if it contained an electronic tag identifying it as a hatchery-raised fish. Credit: NEBRASKAland Magazine/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission Fishing and HunNtiangm Lei coefn Ssee Tctrieonnd s 31 32 Status Review and Conservation Recommendations for the Gull-billed Tern Name of Section Preserving Virginia’s Wild Heritage Virginia Shepherd (Retired) Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries In 1929, A. Willis Robertson, the beleaguered chairman of the Virginia Commission of Game and Inland Fisheries wrote: “Anyone who has an idea that a public job is a bed of roses should just lie on it for a few months and he will soon find that the thorns are more prominent than the perfume.” These words undoubtedly echoed the frustration felt by his fellow state fish and wildlife commission-ers across the country in the early 1930s. Though charged to protect their state’s wildlife legacy, fish and game agencies were—without exception—underfunded, under-staffed, and politically controlled. Most relied on hunting and fishing license fees as the chief source of income to carry out enormous responsibilities; however, these funds were sorely inadequate and perpetually threatened by cash-strapped state legislatures. Simply put, state fish and wildlife agencies alone could not rescue the country’s imperiled fish and wildlife resources. The science of wildlife management was in its infancy. Even the most basic understanding of populations, life histories, habitat require-ments, and species interactions was patchy at best— and grossly flawed at worst. The Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit Program, providing academic training in professional wildlife management, would not be established until 1935. No state agency had the funds, the knowledge, or trained personnel to effectively restore and manage its own fish and wild-life populations. Virtually the only management tools fish and wildlife agencies had at their disposal were the setting of hunting seasons, bag limits, and methods of hunting. But even these were used as political tools, wielded by state legislators and carried out by ill-equipped, politically-appointed game wardens more concerned with ferrying voters to the polls than enforcing hunting and fish-ing regulations. In December of 1931, after five frustrating years as head of Virginia’s fish and game agency, A. Willis Robertson wrote to his politically-appointed Commission board members: “Frankly, I cannot point with any degree of pride to a substan-tial increase in either game or fish during the past 5 years of our Preserving Virginia’s Wild Heritage 33 administration…Unless, there-fore, our Commission looks these facts squarely in the eye and develops some way of increasing the supply of wild life without reducing the shooting privilege to the point where the average hunter will quit in disgust, our administration of this natural resource is going to be regarded as a failure.” It took six more years for that way to be found—and it would happen on a national scale, breaking new ground as the most ambitious initiative ever launched to save America’s fish and wildlife legacy. The initiative mapped out a federal-state matching pro-gram, whereby federal monies would be matched with state funds on a 3:1 basis. Robertson Robertson’s twenty-nine words heard around the conservation world. Credit: Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries. 34 Status Review and Conservation Recommendations for the Gull-billed Tern and wildlife work has been a high priority for P-R funding. In Vir-ginia, every category of wildlife has received attention through applied wildlife research and data collection. In 1947, the State initiated a manda-tory big game checking system and the information gathered every year since then has been part of an effort to record important data for evaluat-ing the status of various species of wildlife. The knowledge gained from P-R funded research and surveys provides the basis for hunting and trapping season recommendations made by the Department’s staff of professional wildlife biologists. Not only does the P-R program fund the management of game species, but it has also helped DGIF fulfill its P-R program allowed Virginia to focus on long-range wildlife research projects, habitat resto-ration, education, and technical assistance to landowners. P-R funds supported the first-ever comprehensive study of wild tur-key, published in 1943 by Henry S. Mosby at Virginia Tech. This landmark achievement in the field of wildlife management set the stage for the restoration of wild turkey populations nationwide. The cannon-projected net trap, originally developed for water-fowl in Missouri in 1948 by H.H. Dill and W. H. Thornsbery, gave Eastern turkey biologists the tool they needed to put their knowl-edge to work. Using this technol-ogy, Virginia embarked upon a 40- year effort to restore turkeys into suitable habitat around the state. During this time approximately 900 turkeys were trapped and re-located, and today Virginia turkey hunters enjoy their sport in every county in the state. An estimated population of some 150,000 birds supports both a spring and fall season of 60,000-70,000 hunters. At the same time newly-trained biologists were working to restore wildlife populations in Virginia, the number of hunters and an-glers taking to the woods nation-wide skyrocketed. In the 1950s, hunting and fishing revenue in Virginia alone doubled from $1 million to $2 million, and the number of hunters and anglers increased from 400,000 to nearly 1,000,000 in a single decade. The P-R program allowed DGIF to respond to the surge in demand for hunting and fishing opportuni-ties by purchasing 45,000 acres of public hunting and fishing lands, increasing office and field person-nel, and providing technical assis-tance to improve wildlife habitat on more than one million acres of private land. By 1976, DGIF was managing nearly 2 million acres of land either owned directly or managed cooperatively. More than half of the land owned by DGIF was purchased with P-R dollars. The research necessary for ef-fective “on-the-ground” habitat seized the opportunity to use his experiences in Virginia to add a provision to the bill, requiring states to enact laws prohibiting the diversion of hunting license revenue from fish and game agency coffers. With a mere 29 words, Robertson ensured that a sustained and politically untouch-able source of funding would be available for long-term wildlife restoration. Seventy-five years later, the Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration (Pittman-Robertson) Program has proven its worth as the nation’s most effective tool used to restore and sustain the nation’s fish and wildlife legacy. Once passed, the Pittman-Robert-son (P-R) Program immediately be-gan to provide states the matching funds necessary to launch legitimate wildlife restoration work. Virginia’s Department of Game and Inland Fisheries (DGIF), like other states, first looked to restore depleted wildlife populations. Its White-tailed deer population had decreased statewide from an estimated 400,000 animals to a mere 25,000. Using P-R funds, Virginia purchased adult deer from North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Alabama and released the animals into suit-able habitat. So significant was the success of these restoration efforts that from 1930 to 1957, Virginia’s deer harvest rose from 1,299 to a record 22,473. Today, the state boasts an annual harvest of 231,000 and a deer population of one million animals. By the 1940s, support from the Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program Virginia DGIF personnel rekease deer purchased from other states. Credit: Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries Relocated turkeys released. Credit: Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries PR dollars fund trained biologists and research. Credit: Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries Preserving VirgNinaiam’se W oifld S Heecrtiitoang e 3355 mandate to ensure the health of all wildlife in Virginia, including such species as the bald eagle, the Virginia northern flying squir-rel, and the piping plover. The P-R program has helped fuel the development of the Depart-ment’s Wildlife Action Plan, a coordinated driving force for all wildlife conservation efforts across Virginia. It utilizes public and private partnerships to help protect and restore endangered species and sustain healthy populations of common species as well. Further supporting the research arm of Virginia’s wildlife program are P-R funded regional projects, including the Southeast-ern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study, which provides southeast-ern wildlife agencies access to resources otherwise unavailable to any single state organization. In 1970-71, the state’s role in hunter education received a substantial boost when the P-R Act was expanded to include the receipts from a ten percent excise tax on handguns and an 11 percent excise tax on the sale of archery equipment. In Virginia, DGIF manages a free, mandatory hunter education program for 12- to 15-year-old children and first-time hunters using a dedicated cadre of more than 900 trained volunteer instructors. Thanks to financial support from the P-R program, these volunteers work with 160 DGIF Conservation Po-lice Officers and train 13,000 stu-dents each year. Since 1988, there The PR program benefits many species including the bald eagle. Credit: Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries has been a 25 percent reduction in the rate of hunting-related shooting incidents statewide. In 2007, the program recorded more than 500,000 graduates of the course. The Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act has proven a remarkable framework to restore and safeguard the future of our nation’s fish and wildlife legacy. Undoubtedly, the accomplish-ments of the program throughout the past 75 years have exceeded the expectations of even the bold-est of its early visionaries. How-ever, the responsibility for the health of America’s fish and wild-life demands constant vigilance. In Virginia alone, 925 species have been identified as wildlife species of greatest conservation need, and the habitats they live in are threatened by development, fragmentation, and degradation. The challenges we face today are no less daunting than they were 75 years ago. However, since 1937 the Wildlife Restoration Program has provided us with the means to respond to overwhelming odds with boldness, inspiration, and steady, informed action. It is our responsibility to protect the future of our wildlife populations and the integrity of their habitat. Once again, we must figure out a way to do it. Loss of wildlife habitat remains a future concern. Credit: Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries 36 C Setleabtruast iRnge tvhiee wW ialdnldife C aonnd s Seprovratt Fioisnh RReesctoomramtioenn Pdraotgiroanms for the Gull-billed Tern Name of Section 37 issue hunter certifications. As more states followed suit, the International Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies (IAFWA) appointed a “Hunter Safety Com-mittee” in 1957, and, in 1966, the NRA hosted the first national “Hunter Safety Coordinators Workshop.” This evolution led to the formation in 1972 of the North American Association of Hunter Safety Coordinators (NAAHSC), now known as the International Hunter Education Association or IHEA. It was at this time, in 1970 and 1972, respectively, that Congress passed key amend-ments to the Pittman-Robertson (P-R) Act, allowing states to fund hunter education programs and develop target ranges as part of their already successful wild-life conservation programs. In 1974, NAAHSC affiliated with the IAFWA, and since then, all 50 states (as well as territories, Canadian provinces and other countries) have passed manda-tory laws, requiring hunters of varying age groups to complete hunter education courses prior to purchasing hunting licenses and going afield. Today, IHEA serves as a modern-day clearinghouse for information and caretaker of the hunting accident (incident) database – a role turned over to it by the National Safety Council. The success of hunter education is one of the hallmark achievem
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Title | Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration program: 75 years of conservation and partnership success |
Contact |
mailto:library@fws.gov |
Creator | U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service |
Description | Seventy-five years of successful wildlife management is the remarkable legacy of the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act, and the cause of our 75th celebration. Along with the Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Act, it is the foundation of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s (USFWS) Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program (WSFR) and a cornerstone of the North American model of fish and wildlife management – a model venerated for its principles, celebrated for its performance, and embraced for its promise for the future. The two Acts mark the triumph of American conservation, founded on public ownership of wildlife, reliance on partnerships, and commitment to preserve our natural heritage. |
FWS Resource Links | http://wsfrprograms.fws.gov/Subpages/AboutUs/AboutUs1.htm |
Subject |
Fishing Hunting Recreation History |
Publisher | U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service |
Contributors | Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program (WSFR) |
Date of Original | 2012 |
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PDF |
Item ID | celebrating-wildlife-sportfish-restoration |
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NCTC Conservation Library Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program Library |
Language | English |
Rights | Public domain |
Audience | General |
File Size | 4874 KB |
Original Format |
Digital |
Length | 88 p. |
Transcript | U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service 75 years of Conservation and Partnership Success Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program ii Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program Foreword In the middle of the Great Depression in 1937, America faced an unprecedented environmental crisis. The Dust Bowl afflicted much of the nation’s heartland. Unwise development ravaged millions of acres of wetlands and other vital wildlife habitat, and many species were near extinction. In response to this crisis, the nation’s sportsmen successfully lobbied Congress to pass what is arguably the most effective conservation law in history -- the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act. In effect, sportsmen selflessly convinced Congress to tax them to fund conservation. The Act established an excise tax on firearms, ammunition and archery equipment that is apportioned to states to support the conservation mission of their fish and wildlife agencies. Along with the Dingell- Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Act passed in 1950 to establish a similar tax on fishing and boating equipment, the law ensures a permanent, dedicated source of conservation funding. It is widely recognized as having provided the foundation for professional wildlife management at both the state and federal level. As we celebrate the 75th anniversary of this landmark law, President Obama and his administration are building on this great foundation through the America’s Great Outdoors initiative. In partnership with communities across the country, we are seeking to establish a conservation ethic for the 21st century and to reconnect people, especially young people, to the natural world. For three generations, Pittman- Robertson has served as a model of conservation partnership. Let us celebrate its success. Let us also seek to build new partnerships that will ensure the health of our land, our water and our wildlife and provide opportunities for future generations to enjoy them. Foreword iii Secretary of the Interior, Ken Salazar Credit: DOI/Tami A. Heilman iv Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program equipment manufacturers who pay an excise tax on the equipment they produce as well as the millions of sportsmen and -women who effectively pay that tax through the purchase of equipment to hunt, fish, shoot and boat, or otherwise enjoy the great American outdoors and our wildlife heritage. The funds collected provide the very foundation of wildlife management in this country. They are dispersed to the various state wildlife agencies, through the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and complement the funding from the sale of hunting and fishing licenses. They also provide critical funding for vital habitat enhancement projects proposed by the states. This approach, born of the Dust Bowl days and echoing that first gathering of conservation visionaries, has resulted in what has become known worldwide as the North American Conservation Model -- which recognizes we all do our best work for wildlife when we work together. For their dream to indeed become a reality, there would be a continuing need to establish strong conservation partnerships at that time and in the future to face the serious challenges in wildlife and environmental conservation. In 1987, as part of its commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act, commonly referred to as the Pittman-Robertson Act in honor of its Congressional sponsors, the Service produced a book entitled Restoring America’s Wildlife, a retrospective volume In 1936, President Franklin Roosevelt convened the first ever North American Wildlife Conference bringing together representatives of the various state wildlife agencies, conservation organizations, and other wildlife interests. He opened the meeting charging those in attendance to work together, and said he hoped that “from it will come constructive proposals for concrete actions… and that through those proposals state and federal agencies and conservation groups can work together for the common good.” Thus was forged a partnership among wildlife conservation interests that in the following year was to be formalized by enactment of the Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act. This year we pay tribute to 75 years of successful fish and wildlife management and habitat enhancement based on the revenues resulting from the Act and accompanying legislation enacted since 1937. We also salute the sporting arms, archery, and fishing documenting the outstanding wildlife conservation stories resulting from that landmark legislation. The intent of this report is to present the same for the past 25 years, and include the many successes realized in fishery conservation resulting from passage of the Dingell- Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Act in 1950. Later, the Wallop- Breaux Amendments effectively combined these programs and resulted in the conservation model we follow today. That book concluded that the “Pittman-Robertson program is the single most productive wildlife undertaking on record…and that it has meant more for wildlife in more ways than any other effort.” I believe this current volume heartily reaffirms that conclusion, and I hope you agree. Finally, I would like to offer a big thanks to the numerous wildlife professionals, writers, photographers, artists and others who have graciously contributed their time and effort in order to make this outstanding publication possible. I certainly hope you find it a worthy salute to three-quarters of a century of outstanding American wildlife conservation. Fish and Wildlife Service Director, Dan Ashe (Foreword, contined) Credit: USFWS/Lavonda Walton Message from the Director Seventy-five years of successful wildlife management is the remarkable legacy of the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act, and the cause of our 75th celebration. Along with the Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Act, it is the foundation of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s (USFWS) Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program (WSFR) and a cornerstone of the North American model of fish and wildlife management – a model venerated for its principles, celebrated for its performance, and embraced for its promise for the future. The two Acts mark the triumph of American conservation, founded on public ownership of wildlife, reliance on partnerships, and commitment to preserve our natural heritage. America’s history of wildlife management began in the chaos of the “commons”—the vast wild lands jointly held and used by all U.S. citizens as a collective asset. A seemingly unlimited resource was relentlessly hunted and fished by a growing population with an insatiable appetite for the food, clothing, trophies, and commercial products wildlife provided. In the jargon of economics, the marginal benefit of hunting one more animal accrued exclusively to the individual hunter, while the cumulative costs of unlimited hunting fell crushingly on the shoulders of society. The discrepancy in benefit and cost led to uncontrolled harvest and the rapid decline of wildlife nationwide. State wildlife agencies stepped into the picture in the early 20th Century with the goal of affirming public ownership of wildlife – the Public Trust Doctrine – and regulating its harvest with licenses. Yet, apart from the revenue from license sales, the wildlife agencies operated on a financial shoe string. Pittman-Robertson and, later, Dingell Johnson came to their fiscal rescue. The excise taxes raised by those Acts – excise taxes paid for by hunters and anglers – along with license fees established the principle of user pays/public benefits, the fiscal foundation of game management in America. The funding enabled by these Acts, however, is only part of the success story. The glue that secures the framework of modern wildlife management is partnership. Our celebration of WSFR’s 75th Anniversary is really a celebration of the power of partnership, of the hunters and anglers who pay the cost of conservation with fees and taxes, the outdoor sporting industries that make the system of excise taxes possible, the State fish and wildlife agencies that provide the scientific know-how to manage game, the many citizen groups and nongovernmental organizations that expand the States’ capacity to manage wildlife, and the USFWS that works hand-in- hand with the States to administer the WSFR Program. We should take pride in the legacy of the WSFR Program over the past 75 years. It has helped empower our State agencies and citizen conservationists to achieve as a nation what no other nation in the world has achieved: unparalleled wildlife Foreword v management success. Sadly, the full story of that success is still largely untold; but it will be told. The new Wildlife TRACS performance reporting system for the WSFR Program will make that story known and available to everyone who cares about wildlife conservation. Finally, to quote the great English bard, what’s past is prologue. Just as the North American model calmed the tempest of the wildlife commons, that same model points the way to conserving the diversity and richness of all wildlife in America. It won’t be easy, but through the synergy of federal, state, and private partnerships, the work that began 75 years ago in 1937 with the passage of Pittman Robertson will carry us to the next 75 years, into a future where our success will extend to all species. Credit: DOI/Tami A. Heilman Hannibal Bolton Message from the Assistant Director for Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program vvii C Setleabtruasti nRge tvhiee wW ialdnlidfe C anodn sSeprovrta Ftiiosnh RReesctoormatmione nPdroagtrioamns for the Gull-billed Tern Table of Contents vii Table of Contents Foreword ...............................................................................................................................................................iii Message from the Director ...................................................................................................................................iv Message from the Assistant Director for Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration .....................................................v The Beginning 75 Years Ago..................................................................................................................................1 A History of Major Events in State and Federal Wildlife Conservation .................................................................. 5 National Outlook Congressional Viewpoints ........................................................................................................................... 8 The Lifeblood of State Fish & Wildlife Agencies .................................................................................... 9 Industry Pride in its Conservation Efforts ............................................................................................ 13 Boating-Related Revenues Pack a Powerful Funding Punch for Aquatic Conservation and Boating Infrastructure Programs ........................................................................... 17 Valuing the Benefits of Wildlife............................................................................................................................ 21 Quick Facts from the 2011 National Survey................................................................................................ 22 National Survey Trends Graph .............................................................................................................. 27 State Outlook Reliable Funding Source Benefits America’s Sport Fisheries ............................................................. 29 Fishing and Hunting License Trends ...................................................................................................... 31 Preserving Virginia’s Wild Heritage ....................................................................................................... 33 Education Realm Hunter Education ..................................................................................................................................... 37 Aquatic Resource Education .................................................................................................................... 41 Becoming an Outdoors-Woman................................................................................................................. 43 “Trophies” - WSFR’s 75th Anniversary Painting .................................................................................................. 44 Conservation Success Stories Pacific Region: The Elements of Success: How WSFR Funds Helped Create Summer Lake Wildlife Management Area ..............................................................................................45 Conservation on Sarigan Island, Northern Mariana Islands................................................................46 Southwest Region: Desert Bighorn Sheep Restoration in New Mexico .............................................47 Midwest Region: Renovation of Wisconsin’s Wild Rose State Fish Hatchery ...................................49 Southeast Region: Elk Restoration and Management in Eastern Kentucky .....................................50 Alabama Children Get Their Feet Wet in the Creek Kids Program.....................................................51 Northeast Region: Virginia’s Quail Recovery .........................................................................................52 Restoration of Arctic Char and Eastern Brook Trout at Big Reed Pond, Maine ...............................52 Mountain Prairie Region: Smith Family “Legacy” Becomes New Addition to Utah’s Tabby Mountain Wildlife Management Area ............................................................................54 viii C eSlteabtruatsi nRg ethveie Wwi ladnlifde Canodn Sspeorrvta Ftiisohn R Resetcoormatimone Pnrdoagtriaomns for the Gull-billed Tern Whirling Disease Research in Colorado-Resitant Rainbow Trout Studies .........................................56 Alaska Region: Kenai Moose Research Center - A World Leader in Moose Science ........................57 Pacific Southwest: Lake Mohave Habitat Enhancement ......................................................................59 Wildlife Reflections Hunting and Fishing: A Modern Answer to Environmental Concerns ...............................................61 A Noiseless Effort that Has Changed the World ....................................................................................63 Acknowledgments ................................................................................................................................................65 Appendix - Program Data ................................................................................................................................66-76 Name of Section 1 The Beginning 75 Years Ago Mark Madison, Historian U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Creating a New Conservation Constituency: The Pittman-Robertson Act of 1937 and the Dingell- Johnson Act of 1950 The America of colonial times teemed with wildlife and fish. However, the country’s rapid westward expansion in the 19th century took an enormous toll on wildlife habitat which disappeared at an alarming rate. Moreover, by the 20th century, decades of poor enforcement of existing hunting laws, the unregulated growth of market hunting, and hunters who took more than their share (commonly referred to as “game hogs”) added to the decline of once-abundant wildlife populations with many game species teetering on the brink of extinction. Although today it may be hard to believe, in 1937 there were relatively few white-tailed deer remaining in the country. In Indiana, for example, the last known specimen had been killed in 1893, and spotting one anywhere on the East Coast would have been a rare event. Out West, pronghorn antelope, elk, and bighorn sheep populations were fast declining. Beavers were practically nonexistent south of the Canadian border, and wild turkeys faced imminent extinction across the country. Many dedicated conservationists and sportsmen alike watched this trend with growing alarm and worked to get the country’s first wildlife laws enacted to protect America’s wildlife and the habitat upon which it depended. In the 1930s, a combined economic depression and ecological disaster led the federal government to seek innovative ways to help impoverished Americans and conserve our nation’s lands and wildlife. The Great Depression and the Great Plains Dust Bowl destroyed families and decimated wildlife habitat, leading President Franklin Roosevelt, wildlife conservation organizations, sportsmen, and several concerned Congressmen to work together to pass a series of laws that, today, are still the foundation of this country’s natural resource conservation programs. The creation of the Civilian Conservation Corps (1933- 1942) introduced 2.5 million young men to outdoor work on national forests, parks, and wildlife refuges. In 1934 the Migratory Bird Hunting Stamp Act (popularly known as the Duck Stamp Act) raised money for wetland acquisition through the sale of special revenue stamps required for legal hunting of waterfowl. President Roosevelt, in 1936, convened the First North American Wildlife Conference, which brought together a variety of agencies and organizations to discuss the future of wildlife conservation in America. The Beginning 75 Years Ago 1 Market hunters also known as “game hogs”. Credit: USFWS Senator Key Pittman of Nevada Credit: USFWS Representative A. Willis Robertson of Virginia. Credit: USFWS Drought and wind took a toll on habitat. (Dallas, South Dakota 1936) Credit: U.S. Department of Agriculture Status Review and Conservation Recommendations for the Gull-billed Tern sponsor the bill in the Senate and the Senator quickly concurred with the bill’s original language. Shoemaker then asked Virginia Congressman A. Willis Robertson to co-sponsor the bill in the House. Robertson, a former chairman of the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries from 1926-1932, closely examined its language. As chairman, Robertson had seen game funds repeatedly raided for other state projects. Based on his own experience, he said he would support the bill if Shoemaker would insert the following sentence: “…and which shall include a prohibition against the diversion of license fees paid by hunters for any other purpose than the administration of said State fish and game department…” Shoemaker agreed, stating that the 29 words were the most important additions made by anyone. With this amendment, Congress passed the bill, shepherded by a constituency of Congressional sportsmen and -women. Pittman-Robertson represented a milestone in North American conservation history. All hunters (not just waterfowl hunters) were actively investing in the future of wildlife and its habitat. The North American Model of Conservation was solidified; not only did the 2 Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program The 1937 Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act (popularly known as the Pittman-Robertson Act after its Congressional sponsors) was the next step in a quickly-evolving American conservation movement. It provided a much-needed, stable source of funding for wildlife conservation programs across the country and today is considered the single most productive wildlife undertaking on record. Interestingly enough, the legislation’s most vocal supporters were sportsmen and hunters – the very group that would be most affected by the tax. Many hunters made it clear they willingly would accept a permanent tax if it meant the government would use the funds to work with the states to ensure the sustainability of popular game animals. Although these partners recognized the urgency of securing a permanent dedicated funding source, it still took a great deal of work to actually pass the Act. The idea behind Federal Aid goes back at least to 1935 when a proposal was first made to use an existing excise tax on sporting arms and ammunition for game restoration and habitat acquisition to be managed by the Biological Survey. Normally, this proposal would have garnered support from sportsmen; however in the midst of an economic depression it was a tough sell to transfer any excise tax revenue out of general government funds needed for the country’s recovery. During the 1930s, a group of gifted conservationists and new organizations kept the issue alive for the next several years. The recently-hired head of the Biological Survey, Jay N. “Ding” Darling was a noted prize-winning political cartoonist, conservationist, sportsman, and influential friend of President Franklin Roosevelt. A visionary, Darling lobbied ceaselessly for the funds to support wildlife restoration. Upon retiring from the Bilogical Survey in 1935 he went on to found the National Wildlife Federation (NWF) in 1936 which made wildlife restoration its mission. Darling, himself, relentlessly pressed all of his Washington contacts to move the act forward. Carl Shoemaker, NWF’s Secretary, was equally influential in securing the Act’s passage. A Washington insider who knew Congress well, Shoemaker also served as the Secretary of the Senate Wildlife Committee at the time. He has been called the “father of the P-R program” because he drafted the original legislation that would not only be acceptable to both houses of Congress but also satisfy conservationists and sportsmen. Shoemaker asked Nevada Senator Key Pittman to J.N. “Ding” Darling – cartoonist, hunter, and conservationist. Credit:USFWS J.N. “Ding” Darling illustration. Credit: USFWS Carl Shoemaker...author of the legislation. Credit: National Wildlife Federation Name of Section 3 American people own the nation’s wildlife, but now they actively supported it financially. Finally, the P-R Act was the beginning of a series of acts which found innovative ways to support ongoing wildlife conservation needs. Signed into law by President Franklin Roosevelt on September 2, 1937, the Pittman-Robertson Act specified a 10 percent tax on hunting-specific guns and ammunition and mandated the money be set aside to aid the states in funding wildlife restoration projects. To account for vast differences in land area and population size among the states, a formula was created to calculate how much money each state should receive, taking into consideration both the size of the state and the number of licensed hunters residing there. States were eligible to receive up to 75 percent of total project costs from the Pittman-Robertson fund, with the expectation they would provide the remaining 25 percent. This provision encouraged states to take greater responsibility for their own conservation programs, while also ensuring they could afford the resources necessary to implement them. During the first ten years following the passage of the Act, 38 states acquired roughly 900,000 acres of land for use as wildlife management areas. Early projects focused on habitat reclamation and wildlife relocation, transplanting deer and other endangered animals from states such as Wisconsin and Michigan (which had fewer people and more wildlife) into states with dwindling game populations. By 1948, wildlife experts across the country had moved thousands of deer, pronghorn antelope, and elk, as well as smaller numbers of mountain goats, wild sheep, and bears. The success of these efforts was quick and dramatic; given access to protected habitat with sufficient water and food, transplanted species thrived. Indiana quickly recovered from its deer shortage, recording about 5,000 specimens in 1951 and more than 50,000 by 1970. Other states, The Beginning 75 Years Ago 3 particularly those in the South, recorded similar upsurges in deer populations. The pronghorn antelope was brought back from near-extinction, and beavers were restored in nearly all areas that made up their original range. The rest of the targeted species saw marked success as well. Since its initial passage, the Pittman-Robertson Act has been amended several times. Of the money provided by Wildlife Funds in the past 25 years, approximately 45 percent has gone toward acquiring (through purchase or lease) and maintaining lands for wildlife management, approximately 28 percent has been used for wildlife surveys, research, and technical assistance, and approximately 12 percent has been used for hunter education. A small portion is set aside yearly for coordination and administration. (See Accomplishments Pie Charts, Appendix). Hunter Education Funds are made up partly through the allocation of 50 percent of the tax on pistols, revolvers, and some archery materials. The money collected by Pittman- Robertson has grown steadily in the 75 years since its enactment. In 1939, the year it went into effect, the amount of money apportioned by the federal government to the states totaled $890,000. In 2010, the program provided approximately $473 million, divided among all 50 states as well as Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, the Northern Mariana Islands, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Since 1937, more than $7.1 billion (almost $14 billion 2012 dollars see Apportionments, Appendix) has been dispensed for various conservation projects, matched by about $2.4 billion in state contributions. In 75 years, states have acquired millions of Waterfowl sportswoman with dog. Credit: USWS 4 Status Review and Conservation Recommendations for the Gull-billed Tern U.S. Congressman John Dingell (center) sponsored bill leading to Sport Fish Restoration Act. Credit: USFWS acres of land for conservation purposes, and have worked with some 9.3 million landowners to help them manage their own lands for the benefit of native wildlife. Today many species have been successfully restored, including wild turkeys, deer, pronghorn antelope, wood ducks, beavers, bears, Canada geese, elk, wild sheep, bobcats, and mountain lions. Many other species have benefitted indirectly from Pittman-Robertson conservation efforts such as songbirds, bald eagles, falcons, sea otters, and prairie dogs. Perhaps the Act’s most important legacy is the development of a new conservation constituency of millions of sportsmen and -women who directly invest in the wildlife resources they so deeply cherish. The success of Pittman- Robertson inspired anglers to undertake a similar effort to provide a source of funding for the nation’s fisheries. In 1947, Michigan Congressman John Dingell introduced a bill patterned after Pittman- Robertson to impose a 10 percent manufacturers’ excise tax on certain equipment for recreational fishing. The monies collected under the authority of the proposed legislation were to be returned to the states to help fund sport fish programs. Although vetoed by President Truman, the bill ignited increased support from the country’s growing number of anglers. In 1950, Congressman Dingell and Colorado Senator Edwin Johnson introduced a revised version and, on August 9, 1950, President Truman signed the Federal Aid in Sport Fish Restoration Act into law. The Sport Fish Restoration Act, commonly known today as Dingell-Johnson, applied a ten percent manufacturers’ excise tax on fishing rods, reels, creels, and artificial baits, lures, and flies, with the revenue earmarked for the states and territories for projects that would enhance sport fish restoration. Since 1950, state projects have included the full array of the sport, from efforts to increase anglers’ access, to fish stocking, removal of invasive species, improved fish ladders to fish disease studies. (See Accomplishments Pie Charts, Appendix) However, all share a commitment to the better management of state fisheries resources. The Dingell- Johnson Act provided the perfect complement to the earlier Pittman-Robertson legislation. Now, aquatic habitats and species would reap similar benefits as their terrestrial counterparts. Equally important, anglers joined hunters in investing in and supporting conservation programs aimed at saving this country’s natural fish and wildlife heritage. Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program U.S. Senator Edwin Johnson of Colorado sponsored bill leading to Sport Fish Restoration Act. Credit: USFWS Name of Section Survey; still later, it is renamed the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 1887 - Efforts to ban or regulate commercial hunting accelerate when Theodore Roosevelt and George Bird Grinnell start the Boone and Crockett Club to promote and ensure the future of big game hunting in North America. 1890 - Wyoming places a moratorium on bison hunting. 1895 – Michigan and North Dakota pass the first laws requiring all hunters to purchase state hunting licenses. 1900 - The Lacey Act is passed prohibiting interstate shipping of wildlife taken in violation of any state game law. Managed by the Biological Survey, it puts market hunters out of business. 1903 - First National Wildlife Refuge is established on Pelican Island, Florida a habitat devastated by market hunting and plume traders. 1908 - On May 13, President Theodore Roosevelt hosts the White House Conference on the Conservation of Natural Resources. Attending are governors, members of his Cabinet and the Supreme Court, members of Congress, scientists, industrial leaders and conservationists - all called together to focus on the loss of wildlife, forests, and other natural resources caused by the exploitation of what had once been perceived as inexhaustible. 1930 – Aldo Leopold and a distinguished group of wildlife conservationists are asked by the American Game Institute 1865 - Massachusetts establishes a Commission of Fisheries and Game, the first State game commission. 1875 - Pressed by sport hunters, Arkansas passes the first law banning all commercial hunting of waterfowl. Similar laws were quickly passed in Florida and other states. 1878 - New Hampshire and California create state game departments. 1879 - With populations of many major game species in severe decline, Michigan placed a ten-year moratorium on elk hunting. 1885 - Division of Economic Ornithology and Mammalogy is established within the U.S. Department of Agriculture. With Clinton Hart Merriam as its first Chief, much of the Division’s early work is focused on studying the positive effects of birds in controlling agricultural pests and defining the geographical distribution of animals and plants throughout the country. The Division later expands and is renamed the Bureau of Biological A History of Major Events in State and Federal Wildlife Conservation (now the Wildlife Management Institute) to draft a policy to guide wildlife conservation. The 1930 American Game Policy lays out a broad vision, acknowledging that existing conservation programs are inadequate to stem the declines in wildlife. It calls for a program of restoration implemented by scientifically- trained professionals with a stable funding source and declares it is time for wildlife management to “be recognized as a distinct profession and developed accordingly.” Carl Shoemaker is appointed special investigator for the newly created U.S. Senate Special Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. He later becomes the author of the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act. 1934 - The Migratory Bird Hunting Stamp Act, popularly known as the “Duck Stamp Act,” is passed by Congress. The Act requires the purchase of a revenue stamp by waterfowl hunters 16 years old and over. Money generated by stamp sales is used to acquire or lease important wetlands. Since its inception, the program has resulted in the protection of approximately 5.3 million acres of waterfowl habitat. Unregulated hunting sped the decline of wildlife populations. Credit: Missouri Department of Natural Resources 1934-1935 Federal Duck Stamp, designed by J.N. “Ding” Darling The Beginning 75 Years Ago 5 66 C Selteabtruatsi nRg etvheie Wwi ladnlidfe Canodn Sspeorrvta Ftiisohn R Reestcoormatimone Pnrdoagtriaomns for the Gull-billed Tern 1937 - The Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act (commonly referred to as the Pittman- Robertson Act) is passed by Congress to provide grant funds to the states’, and insular areas’ fish and wildlife agencies for projects to restore, conserve, manage, and enhance wild birds and mammals and their habitat. Through the purchases of firearms, ammunitions, and archery equipment, the Wildlife Restoration program remains a successful user pay, user benefit program. 1939 - The Bureaus of Fisheries and Biological Survey are moved to the Department of the Interior and the following year combined to create the Fish and Wildlife Service. 1950 - The Federal Aid in Sport Fish Restoration Act (commonly referred to as the Dingell-Johnson Act) is passed to create a program to support the restoration and improvement of America’s fishery resources. It provides grant funds to the states’, the District of Columbia’s and insular areas’ fish and wildlife agencies for fishery projects. It is modeled after the successful Wildlife Restoration program. The purchases of fishing equipment fund this program. 1954 - Funds from an 11 percent excise tax on sporting arms and ammunition [Internal Revenue Code of 1954, sec. 4161(b)] are appropriated to the Secretary of the Interior and apportioned to States on a formula basis for paying up to 75 percent of the cost of approved projects. Project activities include acquisition and improvement of wildlife habitat, introduction of wildlife into suitable habitat, research into wildlife problems, surveys and inventories of wildlife problems and acquisition and development of access facilities for public use. 1955 – Cossley, S-D Surveys Inc. of New York conducts the first National Survey of Fishing and Hunting under contract to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 1965 – Bird watching and wildlife photography are added to the National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation. 1970 - Public Law 91-503, approved October 23, 1970, (84 Stat. 1097) adds provisions for the deposit of the 10 percent tax on pistols and revolvers, half of which may be used by the States for hunter safety programs. This amendment also provides for development of comprehensive fish and wildlife management plans as an optional means for participating in the program, and changes the maximum limit from $10,000 to one-half of one percent for Puerto Rico and to one-sixth of one percent for the Virgin Islands and Guam. 1972 - On October 25, 1972, the Act is further amended by P.L. 92-558 (86 Stat. 1172) to add provisions for the deposit of the 11 percent excise tax on bows, arrows, their parts, and accessories for use in wildlife projects or hunter safety programs. 1973 - The 1930 American Game Policy is expanded into the North American Wildlife Policy to meet growing conservation challenges: the continued expansion of the human population, increased resource consumption, recreational use of fish and wildlife, endangered species, habitat management, and multiple-use policies. The updated Policy sets the stage for efforts to sustain our hunting heritage, focus on non-game and game species, establish international agreements to support wildlife conservation, provide incentives for private landowners for wildlife habitat management, enhance range management and wetland protection, and expand public outreach and conservation education. 1975 – Archery and shooting sports are added to the National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation. 11% excise tax on bows and arrows. Credit: Missouri Department of Natural Resources Credit: Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries The BegNinanmineg o75f SYeeacrtsi oAng o 77 1980 – Congress passes the Forsythe-Chafee Fish and Wildlife Conservation Act (“Nongame Act”), modeled after Pittman- Robertson and Dingell-Johnson, to expand federal support to restore and conserve nongame vertebrate species. Congress never authorized funding for the program. 1984 - Public Law 98-369, approved July 18, 1984 (26 U.S.C. 9504, 98 Stat. 1012) creates the Aquatic Resources Trust Fund comprised of the Sport Fish Restoration Account and the Boating Safety Account. This amendment expands the items of fishing tackle subject to the 10 percent excise tax and imposed a new 3 percent excise tax on fish finders and electric trolling motors. In addition, it provides for the deposit of receipts from these excise taxes and from the following sources into the Sport Fish Restoration Account: the motorboat fuels tax revenues less amounts deposited into the Boating Safety Account, and the import duties on fishing tackle, yachts and pleasure craft. This Act also directs that the additional funds be equitably allocated between marine and freshwater sport fish and directs States to use up to 10 percent of funds for boating access facilities and aquatic resources education programs. 1984 - Public Law 98-369 also amends the Sport Fish Restoration Act to require the States to equitably allocate these new funds between marine and fresh water projects and to allocate 10 percent of apportionments to boating facilities. Payments for multi-year projects are authorized; the administrative expense deduction is reduced from 8 percent to 6 percent; up to 10 percent is authorized for aquatic resources education; and the District of Columbia is qualified for one third of one percent. The effective date of these amendments is October 1, 1984, and they are commonly called the Wallop-Breaux amendments. 1988 - Public Law 100-448, approved September 28, 1988 (102 Stat. 1836) increases the amount authorized to be appropriated from the motor boat fuels tax receipts into the Boating Safety Account from $45 million to $60 million for Fiscal Years 1989 and 1990, then to $70 million for Fiscal Years 1991, 1992, and 1993. It also amends the Sport Fish Restoration Act to require States to equitably allocate all amounts apportioned between marine and freshwater projects, with no State to receive less than the amount apportioned in 1988. 1998 – Public Law 105-178 (112 Stat.482), June 9, 1998, entitled the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century, contains the Sportfishing and Boating Safety Act. These provisions create a national outreach program to promote boating and fishing and provide funds for fiscal years 1999 through 2003. 1991 – The Fish and Wildlife Diversity Initiative is launched by the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies (AFWA). Legislation titled the Fish and Wildlife Diversity Funding Act is drafted providing for excise taxes on outdoor products and conservation programs for all vertebrates and invertebrates. This effort would later be renamed the Teaming with Wildlife Initiative (TWW). 2000 - The Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Programs Improvement Act of 2000 authorizes the Secretary of the Interior to develop and implement a Multistate Conservation Grant Program, a Firearm and Bow Hunter Education and Safety Program, and provides funding for four fisheries commissions and the Sport Fishing and Boating Partnership Council. 2000 - Congress authorizes the State Wildlife Grants Program and passes the Wildlife Conservation and Restoration Act. Both programs are funded in part through the Land and Water Conservation Fund. 2005 - Public Law 109-59 (119 STAT. 1144) August 10, 2005, entitled Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users, amends the Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Act to make authorization of appropriations from the Sport Fish Restoration and Boating Trust Fund. 2005 - Public Law 109-74 (119 Stat. 2030), entitled the Sportfishing and Recreational Boating Safety Amendments Act, increases the authorization of appropriations from the Highway Trust Fund to the Secretary of Transportation for payment of expenses of the Coast Guard for the national recreational boating safety program 2011 - The first comprehensive revision of the regulations that govern the Wildlife Restoration, Sport Fish Restoration, and Hunter Education programs is published and located in Part 80 of Title 50 of the Code of Federal Regulations. Status Review and Conservation Recommendations for the Gull-billed Tern August 14, 2012 As a conservationist, life-long avid outdoorsman and former Park Ranger, few issues are as important to me as the health and accessibility of our public lands and wildlife protection. Throughout my career, I have been a tireless advocate for the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program and other initiatives to conserve our natural resources and protect the environment, public lands, and wildlife. A large number of wildlife species, as well as people, benefit from healthy wetland systems, and these enjoyable experi-ences can instill a lasting appreciation for our great outdoors unlike any other. Wildlife-related recreation generates over $120 billion of economic output each year in our country and such wildlife wetlands and refuges are also proven to prevent flooding, reduce the severity of storm surges, and mitigate the damag-ing effects of soil erosion. As my father, who helped create this program, used to say, “we are borrowing the land from future generations.” I am proud of his work to create this program and our efforts to sustain it, and I will continue to ensure that we leave the land in better condition than when we received it so our children and grandchildren can enjoy it as I have throughout my life with my father and my children. ~U.S. House of Representatives, John Dingell, Michigan August 15, 2012 Throughout my career in Congress, I have amassed a reputation for being a fierce proponent of develop-ing the resources of Alaska and our great nation. However, another priority that garners less attention is my work for the conservation of America’s fish and wildlife. As a founding Member of the Congressional Sportsmen’s Caucus, former Chairman of the House Resources Committee, and currently a senior Mem-ber of the House Natural Resources Committee, I have worked on many bipartisan legislative efforts to conserve fish and wildlife species, both at home and abroad, for future generations of Americans to experi-ence and enjoy. As Chairman, I sponsored one of these important initiatives - the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Programs Improvement Act of 2000, which continued and modernized the Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Act and the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act. This legislation, which passed both houses of Congress nearly unanimously, serves as an example of how Congress can work together, with a supportive Administration, industry, and sportsmen stakeholders towards an achievable goal to enact good legislation that makes a difference. Through the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program, the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act along with the Federal Aid in Sport Fish Restoration Act (now the Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Res-toration Act) has contributed more than $14 billion to fish and wildlife conservation in the U.S. As we celebrate the 75th anniversary of the Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act (now the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act) we should pause and take note of the successes realized, while also looking to the future and recognizing that there is much work left to be done. ~U.S. House of Representatives, Don Young, Alaska National Outlook Congressional Viewpoints 8 Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program The Wildlife and Sport Fish RNesatmorea toiofn S Percotgioranm 9 The times were as bleak as a nation had ever known. Unemployment and economic stagnation were worsening in post-World War I America and the abundance of wildlife riches that once graced the landscape were dwindling or disappearing altogether. By the 1930s, the United States had already seen the extinction of the Carolina Parakeet and the Passenger Pigeon due to indiscriminate killing, unenforceable laws and a lack of science on the two species’ behavior and ecology. White-tailed deer populations were near all-time lows and in some places were completely eliminated. Other species such as the wood duck, wild turkey and bison were not far behind. Americans took the sustainability of the country’s wildlife populations for granted, without considering the toll their actions were taking on many species and, therefore, on opportunities for hunting. Fledgling fish and game agencies of the early 1900s had become the stewards of their state’s natural resources, but they desperately struggled to find funding to carry out needed wildlife research and restoration efforts. Most of the activities within state wildlife agencies were directed toward ensuring the enforcement of inadequate game and fish laws, where, at least, they could acquire funds through the sale of hunting and fishing permits or licenses and fines collected from game and fish violations. In South Carolina, for example, a game warden’s pay equaled one-half of the total monies he collected from fines. But even with such meager funding sources, state agencies had to stay ever on guard against threats by cash-strapped state administrations. The agencies knew the need for action in wildlife restoration was urgent and the timing was right. With Franklin D. Roosevelt in the White House, wildlife conservation became one of the two key components in his New Deal; the other, employment. Roosevelt believed that private enterprise would be stimulated, not threatened, by works in conservation. The state agency members of the International Association of Game, Fish and Conservation Commissioners (IAGFCC—the precursor to the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies) saw the potential for their own concerns in this new federal attitude. Furthermore, they were backed by conservation leaders including Aldo Leopold and Ding Darling, in addition to THE WILDLIFE AND SPORT FISH RESTORATION PROGRAM: THE LIFEBLOOD OF STATE FISH & WILDLIFE AGENCIES John Frampton, WSFR 75th Anniversary Director, AFWA Carol Bambery, General Counsel, AFWA others from Theodore Roosevelt’s era. After much hard work from conservationists, sportsmen, and Congress, in 1937, President Roosevelt signed the Wildlife Restoration Act into law. Immediately, IAGFCC declared its support for new legislation to provide federal funding to states for fishing resources. With the creation of reservoirs across the country during the 20th century, state agencies recognized a need for information on the ecology of impounded fisheries and the state of America’s hatcheries. These hatcheries were (and continue to be) essential for stocking reservoirs and rivers. Increased angling and commercial fishing pressures emphasized the demand for better management and facilities. Conservationists proposed that the money to fund a Sport Fish Restoration companion bill to Pittman-Robertson could come from an excise tax on fishing equipment and lures. The bill was introduced in 1939; however, contrary to then IAGFCC General Counsel Talbott Denmead’s, opinion that “In spite of wars, rumors of wars, sun spots, election and politics, the trend in fish and game legislation was upward,” the bill failed. It was not until after World War II that Michigan Congressman John Dingell and Colorado Senator Edwin “Big Ed” Johnson would revive the bill. President Harry S. Truman signed the Sport Fish Restoration Act (also known as Dingell-Johnson) into law on August 9, 1950. Credit: Arizona Game and Fish Department/George Andrejko 1100 C eSlteabtruatsi nRg ethveie Wwi ladnlifde Canodn Sspeorrvta Ftiisohn R Resetcoormatimone Pnrdoagtriaomns for the Gull-billed Tern funded mainly through Wildlife Restoration Funds and license revenues, populations of various subspecies of wild turkey are thriving in the 48 contiguous states and Hawaii. Today, the Eastern Wild Turkey population numbers more than 5.1 million birds. Pronghorn antelope, elk, wood duck, black bears and many others share similar success stories. Moreover, such increases in populations directly correlate to greater hunting opportunities. In 1937, deer hunting was prohibited These vital legislative efforts provided national funding mechanisms for conservation that remain the lifeblood of every state fish and wildlife agency. Since 1937, more than $14 billion dollars have been entrusted to state agencies through the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program for managing and restoring fish and wildlife and their habitats. Coupled with more than $1.2 billion total in annual license revenues reserved for the administration of state game and fish agencies, these funds have yielded unprecedented conservation success stories impacting not only fish and wildlife, but also untold generations of hunters, shooters, anglers, boaters and outdoor recreation enthusiasts. When the Wildlife Restoration Act was passed, there were fewer than 500,000 white-tailed deer in this country. Today, through enhanced habitat management and restoration efforts, there are more than 30 million animals and are at record numbers in almost every state where they are found. In the 1930s, there were approximately 30,000 wild turkeys. Through state restoration efforts in Kansas; New Jersey had only six deer hunting days available; and the deer population in Illinois was estimated at only 3,000 animals. Today, Kansas harvests roughly 100,000 deer each year; New Jersey has more than 160 deer hunting days available; and Illinois deer hunters harvest in excess of 188,000 animals each year. North Carolina and Ohio have had similar success. In 1972, the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission finally was able to establish a fall turkey season; in the spring of 1977, only 144 turkeys were reported harvested, however, by 2008, more than 10,400 were reported harvested. Ohio’s first turkey season took place in 1966 during which hunters harvested only 12 birds. In 2009, they took more than 20,700. Since 1950, state agency hatchery programs have been heavily supported by Sport Fish Restoration funds. Over the past 20 years, approximately 25 percent of Sport Fish Restoration funds have supported hatchery production and stocking. Sport Fish Restoration funds have also been used to improve tens Healthy bull elk in velvet; just one of many successful restoration efforts. Credit: Arizona Game and Fish Department/George Andrejko White-tailed deer populations increased. Credit: USFWS/Lori Bennett Wild turkeys now flourish in previously poor habitat. Credit: NEBRASKAland Magazine/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission The Wildlife and Sport Fish RNeastmorea toiofn S Percotgioranm 1111 of thousands of acres of waters diminished by siltation and pollution, which, in turn, has led to the recovery of America’s fishery resources. Techniques developed with research funded through the Sport Fish Restoration Program have resulted in striped bass stocking in reservoirs in almost every state and in many other countries worldwide. In South Carolina, research on striped bass in the Santee Cooper Reservoir System during the 1950s and 1960s led to a stocking program that has been implemented nationwide for land-locked striped bass. Yet, research and restoration is only half the story. With these excise tax-derived funds coupled with license dollars, state agencies have been able to provide hunter education to more than 24 million people; build hundreds of public shooting ranges; develop Walk-In Hunting Access programs; provide more than 22,000 public fishing sites; educate youth in schools about how conservation is funded; and deliver outdoor skills training to millions of Americans of all ages. Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration funds have also helped agencies acquire and maintain hundreds of millions of acres of habitat across the country as well as provide hunting, recreational shooting, fishing and boating access through leases, easements and purchases. These lands and waters are economic assets to both the states and local economies that depend on the more than $85 billion market force of hunters and anglers. We like to say that hunters and anglers pay for conservation in this country, which is clearly evident through the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program. However, we must also give tremendous credit to the industries that manufacture sporting good By working with private landowners who voluntarily enroll their land into walk-in access agreements through Private Lands Open to Sportsmen (PLOTS), the state is securing the hunting tradition and heritage in North Dakota. (Grant # ND W91L) Credit: North Dakota Game and Fish Department/Corey Wentland products and send their quarterly tax checks to the U. S. Treasury, often before those products are sold at the retail or wholesale level. It is a true partnership—from the sportsmen and-women who pay for the equipment and ammunition… to the industry that writes the checks… to the U.S. Department of the Treasury that collects the funds from industry… to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service that allocates them… to the state fish and wildlife agencies for on-the-ground conservation work and access that allows hunters, shooters, archers, anglers, and boaters greater opportunities to enjoy the activities they love best. But, what would happen if a link in this cycle of success were to break and the Wildlife and Sport Fish Programs lost? There would be an immediate loss of more than $800 million annually for fish and wildlife conservation. License fees would need to increase by at least 1122 C Selteabtruatsi nRg etvheie Wwi ladnlidfe Canodn sSeprovrta tFiiosnh RReesctoormatmione nPdroagtiroanms for the Gull-billed Tern 36 percent to recoup lost excise tax revenues. There would likely be a drop in hunting and fishing participation due to higher license fees. It is a future that could look too much like the now distant past. With the changing dynamics of federal and state legislative entities, state fish and wildlife agencies need the continued involvement of all partners in order to maintain support for the excise tax program and conservation. State legislation is a fluid issue and must be continuously reviewed for possible license revenue diversion issues. Likewise, it is imperative for state agencies to remember that activities and programs funded with Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration dollars must remain visible to both industry and legislative bodies; and that America’s sportsmen-and-women are, importantly, the first-line payers into the program. As we celebrate the 75th Anniversary of the Wildlife Restoration Program, let’s celebrate those who had the wisdom and foresight to create and advocate for the program that helps keep us in business—both Anglers, hunters, boaters, purchase fishing/hunting equipment and motor boat fuels. CYCLE OF SUCCESS Manufacturers pay excise tax on that equipment and boaters pay fuel taxes. U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service allocates funds to state fish and wildlife agencies. State agences implement programs and projects. Better fishing, boating, hunting and wildlife-associated recreation. 6 4 5 1 3 2 States receive grants. state fish and wildlife agencies and industry. Let’s recommit to the partnership among state fish and wildlife agencies, the hunting, shootings sports, angling and boating industries, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to ensure our great shared legacy passes down to tomorrow’s sportsmen-and- women. Hunters and anglers should take great pride in knowing that the states’ conservation success is the result of their continued contributions to America’s unique model of user-pay, everyone-benefits! References Outdoor Industry Association. 2012. The Outdoor Recreation Economy 2012. Belanger, Dian Olsen and Adrian Kinnane. 2002. Managing American Wildlife: A History of the International Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies. The International Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies POTENTIAL DIVERSION ISSUES OF STATE LICENSE REVENUES FY 2012 – 7 States FY 2011 – 3 States FY 2010 – 6 States After 75 years, states continue to face potential diversions of hunting and fishing license revenues. The increased fre-quency in diversion issues in recent years may be due to harsh economic times and statewide budget shortfalls. USFWS must continually monitor and audit state expenditures, and proposed state legisla-tion to protect funds. Federal and state agencies work in concert to rectify identified concerns. Source:USFWS Shepherd, Virginia. 2011. “A History of the Federal Aid to Wildlife Restoration Act.” Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries. Industry Pride in its CNoanmseerv oaft ioSne Ectfifoonrt s 1133 Industry Pride in Its Conservation Efforts Glenn Sapir, National Shooting Sports Foundation The firearms and ammunition industry is proud to be a leader and proud to be a partner When it comes to the unique history of conservation in the United States, the firearms and ammunition industry stands unabashedly proud of the leadership it showed in the establishment of the innovative Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program. Throughout the 75 years since the passage of the Pittman-Robertson Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act, the firearms and ammunition industry, represented since 1961 by its trade association, the National Shooting Sports Foundation® (NSSF®), has helped maximize the nation’s funding of each state’s wildlife management efforts and has worked with a variety of partners to help implement the internationally-envied North American Model for Wildlife Conservation. Numbers are one way of telling the story, an accounting that some call “the greatest story never told.” To help tell its story, the National Shooting Sports Foundation has distributed hundreds of thousands of Hunter’s Pocket Fact Cards throughout the country. The card provides fascinating statistics and describes some of the incredible results of an historic partnership among industry, sportsmen and -women, state and federal government and an array of sporting organizations. The numbers change upward daily, ensuring some measure of obsolescence almost immediately; however, the data included on the most recent edition of the card, revised in July 2011, are eye-opening nonetheless. Here are a few examples: • Sportsmen and -women contribute nearly $8 million every day, adding more than $2.9 billion each year for conservation. Some $749 million of that annual revenue is raised through excise taxes paid solely by sportsmen through the purchase of firearms, ammunition, archery gear, fishing tackle and boats. For 2009, for example, firearms and ammunition manufacturers contributed approximately $450 million to wildlife conservation through excise payments. [In 2011, the figure was $460 million, the greatest one-year amount in history.] • Hunters and target shooters [through the firearms and ammunition manufacturers] have paid $6.8 billion in excise taxes since the inception of the Pittman-Robertson Act in 1937. • In 1900, less than half a million white-tailed deer remained in the nation. Today, conservation programs have returned the white-tail population to some 32 million. Sportsmen and -women, whether at the range or in the field, are important partners in the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program. Credit: NSSF • 1901, few ducks remained. Today, there are 44 million populating the United States and Canada. • By the early 1900s, the nationwide population of wild turkeys was less than 100,000. Today, that population exceeds 7 million. • About 55 years ago, the pronghorn antelope population in the United States was only about 12,000. Now it is in excess of 1,100,000! State wildlife management agencies deserve the lion’s share of the credit for their professional management of wildlife resources, both game and nongame, within their borders. Their work, of course, is dependent Status Review and Conservation Recommendations for the Gull-billed Tern though perhaps not obvious, presented the potential for the firearms and ammunition industry to generate even more funding for wildlife conservation. “The bill strengthens wildlife conservation,” declared Lawrence G. Keane, NSSF senior vice president and general counsel, after the legislation was passed by Congress. “By enabling manufacturers to grow their business [by diverting funds from administrative and bank fees to reinvesting in manufacturing production], excise tax receipts will actually grow.” History commonly attributes 1937 to the start of the federal excise tax paid by the firearms and ammunition manufacturers on the products they manufacture. Actually, such an excise tax was initiated in 1932, but those funds were not earmarked for conservation purposes. It was the voice of the firearms and ammunition industry, along with other conservation-minded allies, that called for redirecting these taxes to benefit wildlife populations and assuring that these funds could not be redirected for other purposes. To preserve hunting as an American tradition and, thus, to help discourage any further moves toward nationwide gun control following passage of the National Firearms Act of 1934, the 14 Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program upon adequate financial resources, so it is with understandable pride that NSSF, on behalf of the firearms and ammunition industry, recognizes the contribution of its members and the sportsmen and -women they serve. Robert Scott, chairman of the board of governors of NSSF, said, “The wisdom and commitment to the conservation of our great natural resources displayed 75 years ago— and today—speaks volumes about the dedication, commitment and responsibility that the leaders of our industry have shown to our sports and to our great outdoors.” The Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act, passed in 1937, earmarked an excise tax of 10 percent on sporting long arms and ammunition, which was transferred from the federal treasury to state wildlife management agencies. During World War II the tax was raised to 11 percent and now yields about $310 million per year for wildlife conservation programs. The Dingell-Hart Bill was enacted in 1970, creating a 10 percent excise tax on handguns, which would fund wildlife restoration and hunter education. This measure produces an estimated $125 million per year. The firearms industry, the pioneer of this funding program, was joined by the archery community in 1972 when the Dingell-Goodling Bill, creating a similar, 11 percent excise tax on archery equipment, was passed. The Federal Aid in Sport Fish Restoration Act, enacted in 1950, commonly known as Dingell- Johnson after its Congressional sponsors, implemented a similar excise tax on fishing tackle, which yields an average of an additional $380 million annually. Payment of these excise taxes presents a financial burden on manufacturers, who must pay the tax after their goods are distributed but typically long before payments for these products have been received from retailers or distributors. Until 2010, the firearms and ammunition industry was required to adhere to a more frequent payment schedule than other industries contributing to the wildlife restoration program. The archery and fishing tackle industries always have made payment on a quarterly basis. However, the firearms industry, the trail-blazing participant of the cornerstone of the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation, had historically followed a bi-weekly payment schedule that required not only extra paperwork and staffing but also the necessity for some companies to incur debt to pay the excise tax for which they had not yet been reimbursed by their customers. In 2010, the Firearms Excise Tax Improvement Act resolved this issue by adjusting the firearms and ammunition manufacturers’ schedule to quarterly payments. This change, The sportsman and -women are an important partner in the firearms distribution chain, and thus a key contributor to wildlife conservation, not only by buying a firearm that has already contributed to the Wildlife Restoration Fund, but by purchasing hunting, fishing and trapping licenses that direct funds to the state’s wildlife and or fish management agencies. Credit: NSSF Hunters and target shooters, through the firearms and ammunition manufacturers, have paid $6.8 billion in excise taxes since the inception of the Pittman Roberston Act in 1937. Credit: NSSF Since 1970, a 10 percent excise tax on handguns has helped fund wildlife restoration and hunter education. The measure produces an estimated $125 million per year. Credit: NSSF Industry Pride in its CNoansmerev oatfi oSne Ectfifoornt s 15 25% 32% 34% 9% Wildlife Restoration Account Revenue Sources Pistols Firearms Ammo Archery Equipment Based on Annual Averages industry realized that its funding of conservation was necessary for the survival of our hunting heritage and the wildlife that inhabited the nation. “I can think of no other industry that took such a bold step, in the midst of such hard economic times, to unselfishly establish specific earmarks of the excise taxes paid on the first sale of every product to go to broad-based conservation of all species, game and nongame species alike,” said NSSF President and CEO Steve Sanetti. “Between excise taxes and licenses, sportsmen [and–women] pay for 75 percent of all wildlife and fishery management efforts in the nation, a record that no group can match. “Every hunter and target shooter should be immensely proud of the important part we play in our industry-established system of ‘user pays—everybody benefits,’” Sanetti added, “which is the envy of the world…” and the pride of the firearms and ammunition manufacturing industry. References: License sales. Source USFW: http:// wsfrprograms.fws.gov/Subpages/LicenseInfo/ LicenseIndex.htm Excise tax collections on firearms & ammunition. Source Alcohol & Tobacco Tax & Trade Bureau: http://www.ttb.gov/tax_audit/ tax_collections.shtml Excise tax collections on bow hunting and fishing products. Source Internal Revenue Service: http://www.irs.gov/taxstats/ article/0,,id=175900,00.html Duck & Wildlife Stamp revenues. Source USFW: http://www.fws.gov/duckstamps/ federal/sales/sales.htm Excise tax collection reports. Source USFW. 2011 Final Apportionment Wildlife Restoration Funds: $384 Million http://wsfrprograms.fws.gov/ Subpages/GrantPrograms/WR/ WRFinalApportionment2011.pdf 2011 Final Apportionment Sport Fish Restoration Funds: $365 Million http://wsfrprograms.fws. gov/Subpages/GrantPrograms/SFR/ SFRFinalApportionment2011.pdf Wildlife restoration apportionments 1939 – 2010. Source USFW: http://wsfrprograms. fws.gov/Subpages/GrantPrograms/WR/ WR_Funding.htm Bowhunter Magazine Deer Forecast 2009 http://www.docstoc.com/docs/22381806/2009- Bowhunter-Magazine-Deer-Forecast USFW Waterfowl Report Population Status 2011 http://www.flyways.us/sites/default/files/ uploads/statusreport2011_final.pdf National Wild Turkey Federation http://www. nwtf.org/for_hunters/all_about_turkeys.html Texas Parks & Wildlife 2007 https:// www2.tpwd.state.tx.us/business/feedback/ webcomment/ TTB http://www.ttb.gov/ tax_audit/tax_collections.shtml 1166 C Setleabtruasti nRge tvhiee wW ialdnlidfe C anodn sSeprovrta Ftiiosnh RReesctoormatmione nPdroagtrioamns for the Gull-billed Tern Name of Section 17 Radonski and the SFI to help. With SFI’s help, as well as sup-port from other conservation organizations, Breaux endorsed an alternative funding concept: gas tax revenues on the portion of fuel used in motorboats would be used to fund the expanded Sport Fish Restoration Program. Rep-resentative Breaux and his Senate colleague, Malcolm Wallop of Wy-oming introduced and shepherded the legislation through Congress. The Wallop-Breaux amendments, enacted in 1984, were designed to dramatically increase the amount of available funding for aquatic resource conservation programs Boating-Related Revenues Pack a Powerful Punch Boating-Related Revenues Pack a Powerful Funding Punch for Aquatic Conservation and Boating Infrastructure Programs Douglas Hobbs, Sport Fishing & Boating Partnership Council Coordinator, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Ryck Lydecker, Assistant Vice President for Government Affairs, Boat Owners Association of The United States The effort to expand funding for the Sport Fish Restoration Pro-gram began more than 30 years ago. The genesis of how this expansion would eventually be funded started innocently enough on a fishing trip on Pennsylvania’s Juniata River, which included a member of Congress and the head of a respected fishery conserva-tion organization. Today, the leg-islation and subsequent amend-ments and bills that came about thanks to a conversation between a couple of anglers power not only aquatic resource conserva-tion efforts but also programs designed to increase recreational angling and boating opportunities on America’s waterways. The member of Congress on that long ago fishing trip was then-Rep-resentative John Breaux of Louisi-ana and his angling partner was Gil Radonski, president of the Sport Fishing Institute (SFI). An avid boater and angler since childhood, Breaux was seeking an alternative source of funding to dramatically expand the original 1950 Sport Fish Restoration Program funded under Dingell-Johnson. He wanted to contribute more to the sport he loved. As Radonski recounts, Con-gressman Breaux lamented that the bill he had introduced to capture revenue from an excise tax on boats and their motors, to be used to pro-vide additional monies for the Sport Fish Restoration Program, was not getting any support from his Con-gressional colleagues. He asked and for greater recreational op-portunities for anglers and boat-ers. Subsequent revisions created additional funding sources to support this country’s aquatic re-sources and provide better fishing and boating opportunities for the American people. Boating-related revenues pump up conservation funding In the broadest sense possible, Wallop-Breaux was critical because it brought boaters and the revenues they generated into the Sport Fish Restoration Program fold. For more than 30 years, Sport Fish Restoration Credit:RBFF Motorboat fuel tax is a major source of funding for the Sport Fish Restoration Program. Credit: RBFF 18 C Setleabtruast iRnge tvhiee wW ialdnldife C aonnd sSeprovrat tFiiosnh RReesctoormatmioen nPdraogtiroanms for the Gull-billed Tern had been funded through excise taxes on sport fishing equipment. However, this funding model did not take into account the fact that many anglers fished from motor-powered boats. It was a natural fit to bring recreational boaters into the Sport Fish Restoration community. Aside from the alliance it created between anglers and boaters, per-haps the most important aspect of the Wallop-Breaux legislation was that, in its first year, ap-portionments were made under the provisions of the legislation and funding apportioned to the States increased from $35 million in 1985 to almost $110 million in 1986. The newly- created Boating Access Program directly benefit-ted recreational boaters because it provided a dedicated funding source States could use to build and maintain boat ramps and associated infrastructure. The legislation also enabled States to use funds for Aquatic Resources Education programs. Finally, the law called for equitable funding between saltwater and freshwater projects. Building on success: Program Expansion Benefits Anglers, Boaters and Aquatic Resources Building on the successful 1984 legislation, Congress passed subsequent laws expanding both program funding and support for the improvement and/or construc-tion of boating infrastructure, such as docks and sanitary sewage pumpouts, as well as the promotion of boating safety. The 1988 Wallop-Breaux reau-thorization and amendments not only supported boater safety education, but also funded much-needed research to verify the actual percentage of fuel taxes collected each year directly at-tributable to recreational boaters, since this would determine the revenues available for use by the Sport Fish Restoration Program. In 1990, Congress expanded the portion of fuel taxes deposited in the program, increased funding by adding taxes from small gaso-line engines and funded coastal wetlands protection and restora-tion programs. In 1992, Congress enacted the Clean Vessel Act, which pro-vides grants to States to install and maintain sanitary sewage pumpouts for use by recreational boaters, and also increased funding available for improving boating access facilities. Also, in 1998, the Boating Infrastructure Grant Program was enacted. It funds grants to States and the private sector to provide docks and other boating infrastruc-ture for non-trailerable boats. Congress also further enhanced boating safety programs, in-creased funds available for boat-ing access, captured more gas tax for use by the program, and created and funded the National Outreach and Communications program. The most recent major enhancements to the program occurred in 2005, when Congress expanded the Sport Fish fund by approximately $110 million by capturing all remaining fuel taxes attributable to motorboat and small engine use that was be-ing diverted for other purposes. (American Sportfishing Associa-tion; National Marine Manufac-turer’s Association, 2005). Case Studies: Examples of benefits to the angling and boating public Sport fishing is serious busi-ness in Florida and, as so many anglers attest, when it comes to sport fishing, the largemouth bass reigns supreme. Large-mouth bass, the Florida subspe-cies, grows faster and larger than its bass cousins elsewhere. Therefore, it puts up quite a fight and poses a greater challenge to anglers. In 2002, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Com-mission started planning to transform an old hatchery, the Richloam State Fish Hatchery, into a modern state-of-the-art rearing facility. Five years later, the state unveiled the Florida Bass Conservation Center (FBCC) with a mission “to conduct and utilize essential research to optimize produc-tion, stocking and recruitment of Florida largemouth bass to facilitate integrated conserva-tion management of Florida’s freshwater fisheries resources.” A significant portion of the project was funded through the Sport Fish Restoration program and came from revenues col-lected from a special excise tax on fishing tackle and motorboat fuels. In essence, it is the anglers who so enjoy Florida’s waters who pay for the upkeep of those very waters - and the FBCC promises great returns on their investment. Today, the FBCC is the state’s major freshwater fish production hatchery, supplying largemouth bass and other fish 57% 15% 7% 6% 0.5% 14.5% Sport Fish and Boating Trust Fund Revenue Sources Motorboat Gas Small Engine Gas Interest Imports Electronic Outboard Motors Domestic Fishing Based on Annual Averages Equipment Boating-Related Revenues PaNcka am Peo wofe rSfuelc Ptiuonnc h 1199 such as crappie, catfish, bream, triploid grass carp, striped bass, and sunshine bass. Thanks to the Center, Florida anglers still enjoy their stature as members of the “Fishing Capital of the World,” as they wrestle to reel in home-grown trophies. Aquatic resources education in Minnesota helps develop future conservationists Minnesota has a rich fishing heritage, with more than two million people fishing its waters and contributing approximately $2 billion each year to the state’s economy. Recognizing that recreational fishing and hunting can create strong connections to the environment, the Min-nesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR) developed the Fishing: Get in the Habitat! Min-nAqua Leader’s Guide for use by educators in formal and non-formal educational settings. The guide aims to increase students’ understanding of Minnesota fish, aquatic resources, and resource management; involve students in water-related service learning projects; and connect students to their local aquatic resources through the recreational activity of angling. Angling skills passed on to a new generation. Credit:USFWS/Lori Bennett Lessons and activities provide angling and environmental edu-cation opportunities for schools, web-based education programs, non-traditional schools, com-munity park and recreation programs, youth program lead-ers, nature centers, museums, sporting groups, environmental learning centers, state agencies, watershed districts, fisheries resources and management educators, and any organization conducting academic, standards based, science, outdoor, envi-ronmental, natural resources, conservation and/or outdoor recreational education program-ming for children. The program accommodates multiple learning styles through the differen-tiation and diversity of lesson activities. Through funding from the Sport Fish Restoration Program, Minnesota and other States are actively engaging the public in order to raise awareness of the importance of conserving our nation’s aquatic resources. Boating Access: Recovering from Disaster In September, 2003, Hurricane Isabel roared up the Chesapeake Bay leaving havoc in its wake. One of the casualties it left be-hind was the boating access facil-ity on the York River in Glouces-ter Point, Virginia. The facility, which was 90 percent destroyed, had been a key point of access for recreational boaters and anglers for not only the York River but also the wide-open waters of the lower Chesapeake Bay. How-ever, thanks to core funding of $685,282 from the Sport Fish Restoration funds matched with $228,428 from other sources, a $913,710 facility was constructed and was ready for the 2006 prime boating season. Two accessible piers were constructed as well as a 9,237 square yard parking lot capable of handling 69 car/trailer combinations. Other amenities including restroom facilities and walkways – all handicapped ac-cessible – were added. To protect the environment, erosion and sediment control devices were in-stalled and sensitive submerged aquatic vegetation established. “Most weekends, the facility is filled to capacity,” said James Ad-ams of the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries, “and during certain fish migra-tion times the facility is filled to capacity for several weeks at a time.” The Boating Access provisions included in the 1984 Wallop-Breaux legislation made this and other boating access projects possible. Access for Transient Boaters: Boating Infrastructure Grant Program When the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency started talk-ing about a water trail through the state in 1999, it was not thinking about canoes, kayaks and cartop boats. It was thinking big, as in 800 miles of designated rivers and waterways; big, as in accommodating vessels up to 100 feet and longer; and BIG, as in the federal Boating Infra-structure Grant (BIG) program. After a series of BIG-funded projects along its route, to build dedicated transient facilities for cruisers, the agency declared the Tennessee Boating Trail complete. Seven BIG-funded projects built in partnership with private marinas, state parks and municipal governments in Tennessee helped create the water trail. With a total of eleven BIG-funded transient projects on the Tennessee and Cumber-land rivers now complementing the commercial marinas already available, boaters have tie-up facilities that are never more than an easy day cruise apart-- about six hours, maximum, at typical trawler cruising speeds. These BIG projects are at a major crossroads for boaters cruising the Great Loop—the increasingly popular water route around the entire eastern United States via inland rivers, the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic Ocean, major coastal tributaries, and the Great Lakes—and provide critical boating facilities along the way. 2200 C Setleabtruast iRnge tvhiee wW ialdnldife C aonnd sSeprovrat tFiiosnh RReesctoormatmioen nPdraogtiroanms for the Gull-billed Tern 20 Clean water needed: Clean Vessel Act Protects Alaska’s Coastal Waters Juneau, Alaska’s Aurora Harbor marina faced a dilemma common to many other marinas in the United States. Pumpout equip-ment had been installed in years past; however, its location on the fuel dock meant that boats only used the service when re-fueling. Often, boaters not needing fuel either were reluctant to occupy that space or did not want to wait for access to the pumpout. Using a $100,000 Clean Vessel Act grant, Juneau installed a new system powered by a single pump, which provided five new connec-tions along the harbor’s main float, every 140 feet. Today, boat owners with assigned slips near the main float are able to pump out their holding tanks without ever leaving their slips. Other boaters, including transients, are able to temporarily moor in specially designated zones to service their holding tanks without blocking the fuel dock or other boats. With installation of the new pumpout equipment at the new location, boaters can properly dispose of their sewage, thereby reducing discharge of untreated sewage into Alaska’s coastal waters. A Successful and On-Going Legacy All Americans have reason to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program. Since pas-sage of the original legislation to expand funding for the Sport Fish Restoration Program and subsequent program revisions, funding apportioned to the States for the program has grown from roughly $35 million in 1985 to more than $400 million in 2009. Critical not only to the future of aquatic resource conserva-tion, the funding also supports improved recreational opportu-nities for boaters and anglers. Programs like CVA, BIG and Boating Access have provided Posters and postcard images designed by USFWS to convey WSFR program benefits and partners. Credit: RBFF real benefits to the angling and boating public through the instal-lation of approximately 3,800 coastal pumpout facilities and more than 2,200 inland pumpout facilities. Some 3,500 facilities have been maintained through the CVA program to ensure boat-ers can do their part to maintain clean water. Since the inception of the Boating Access provisions of the Sport Fish Restoration Program, new boating access construction has taken place at more than 3,800 sites and renova-tion or improvement of boating access at more than 7,400 sites. By uniting the economic resourc-es generated by the recreational endeavors, conservation leaders such as John Breaux, Malcolm Wallop and Gil Radonski created a conservation legacy that is still paying dividends to not only anglers and boaters, but to the entire American public. Name of Section 21 from just knowing a resource ex-ists, although they may not actu-ally experience it first-hand, such as, protecting an endangered spe-cies in the Arctic. Option values include not only the availability of wildlife for current use but also its continued availability for future use. The benefits accrued from preserving natural resources for future generations are known as bequest values. Total economic value is the sum of all use and nonuse values. Net economic value is measured as participants’ “willingness to pay” for outdoor recreation over and above what they actually spend to participate. The benefit to society is the summation of willingness-to- pay across all individuals. A price is society’s way of placing values on the goods it wants to consume. How high the price is depends on how much consumer demand there is for the product and how much of it can be pro-duced at that price. The cost of a recreational trip serves as an implicit price for outdoor recre-ation since a market price gener-ally does not exist for this type of activity. All other factors being equal, the lower the cost per trip, the more trips recreationists will take. An individual demand curve gives the number of trips a recreationist will take per year for each different cost per trip. A downward sloping demand curve represents marginal willingness to pay per trip and indicates that each additional trip is valued less than the previous trip. By total-ing the net economic values of all individuals who participate in an activity, we derive its value to society. Economists have developed Valuing the Benefits of Wildlife Anna Harris, Economist U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service During the 19th Century, America saw a dramatic demographic shift. In 1820 only 5 percent of the U.S. population resided in urban areas; by the late 1800s, it exceeded 20 percent, and some feared America was losing her pioneering spirit and becoming too urban. With the onset of this migration, re-source exploitation of America’s wildlife created a catalyst for con-servation, as described in detail throughout this publication. A Total Valuation Framework for Wildlife Economists usually value wildlife resources from the point of view of society as a whole. Economic value is determined in terms of maximum willingness to pay or minimum compensation demand-ed. Recreational expenditures can be used to understand local eco-nomic impacts, but these, alone, are not a satisfactory measure of the economic value of wildlife to society as a whole. To calculate the total economic value of outdoor recreation, econ-omists measure both “use values” and “nonuse values.” Use values are generated when management decisions affect the enjoyment people get from current use of wildlife and include direct as well as indirect use. Direct use values include activities such as hunting, fishing and wildlife observation; indirect use considers personal enjoyment of wildlife without direct interaction such as reading a book about wildlife. Nonuse values are generated when management decisions affect possibilities for future use and consist of existence, option, and bequest values. Existence val-ues are the benefits people receive U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Bait 2011 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation “Wildlife-associated recreation not only sustains our spirit and con-nects us to each other and the natu-ral world, but also provides signifi-cant financial support for wildlife conservation in our nation’s econo-my. According to information from the latest national survey, 90 million Americans, 38 percent of the U.S. population whom are 16 years and older, participated in wildlife-related recreation in 2011 and spent almost $145 billion dollars. This spending supports thousands of jobs in indus-tries and businesses connected to fishing, hunting and the observance of wildlife.” ~Dan Ashe, USFWS Valuing the Benefits of Wildlife 21 2222 CSetlaebturast iRnge vthieew W ailndldif eC aonn Sspeorrvt aFtiisohn R Resetcooramtimone Pnrdoagtriaomns for the Gull-billed Tern QUICK FACTS FROM THE 2011 NATIONAL SURVEY OF FISHING, HUNTING, AND WILDLIFE-ASSOCIATED RECREATION Wildlife-Related Recreationists: 2011 33.1 million anglers 13.7 million hunters 71.8 million wildlife watchers In 2011, 90.1 million U.S. recreationists spent $145 billion on their fishing, hunting, and wildlife watching (closely observing, feeding, and photographing wildlife). 3 8 19 22 18 18 12 Percent of Anglers by Age Group 16 and 17 18 to 24 25 to 34 35 to 44 45 to 54 55 to 64 65 and older Source: 2011 National Survey 3 9 15 18 23 21 11 Percent of Hunters by Age Group 16 and 17 18 to 24 25 to 34 35 to 44 45 to 54 55 to 64 65 and older Source: 2011 National Survey Anglers Pursing Selected Fish by Type of Fishing (Numbers in millions) Fish sought Number of anglers Percent Anglers, total 33.1 100 Freshwater except Great Lakes 27.1 82 Black bass 10.6 32 Panfish 7.3 22 Trout 7.2 22 Catfish/bullhead 7.0 21 Great Lakes 1.7 5 Walleye, sauger 0.6 2 Black bass (largemouth) 0.6 2 Perch 0.5 2 Salmon 0.4 1 Saltwater 8.9 27 Striped bass 2.1 6 Flatfish (flounder, halibut) 2.0 6 Red drum (redfish) 1.5 5 Sea trout (weakfish) 1.1 3 Hunters Pursuing Selected Game by Type of Hunting (Numbers in millions) Game sought Number of hunters Percent Hunters, total 13.7 100 Big game 11.6 85 Deer 10.9 79 Wild turkey 3.1 23 Elk 0.9 6 Bear 0.5 4 Small game 4.5 33 Squirrel 1.7 12 Rabbit, hare 1.5 11 Pheasant 1.5 11 Quail 0.8 6 Migratory birds 2.6 19 Ducks 1.4 10 Doves 1.3 9 Geese 0.8 6 Name of Section 23 are visible during the fall migra-tion. Home to some 270 species of birds, including threatened and endangered species, Crex Mead-ows is a hub of biodiversity. Purchases for the prairie and marshland began in 1945. At present, Wisconsin DNR owns 28,019 acres of the 31,094 acres proposed to create Crex. Pitt-man- Robertson funds helped leverage the effort; the average annual cost of acquisition, habitat development, maintenance, and general operations was approxi-mately $1.9 million (2009 dol-lars). The state matched these expenditures with an additional 25 percent. Twenty-five percent of all visitors come to Crex to hunt or trap deer, bear, waterfowl, and a variety of small game. In Wis-consin, the average deer hunter spends $28 per day on trip-related expenditures including food, lodging, and transportation. Each year, on opening day for white-tail deer at Crex, about 550 hunters take to the field. In 2009, deer hunters spent an estimated $15,400 in trip-related expendi-tures. Along with deer, Crex offers stated preference techniques to assess participants’ “willingness to pay” for outdoor recreation. The demand curve approach uses both expressed preference methods and revealed preference methods to find the maximum amount a person would be willing to pay for a service. The National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation, conducted for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service by the U.S. Census Bureau, asks contingent valuation questions to find an individual’s “willingness to pay” for participation in outdoor recre-ation. Contingent valuation is one technique widely used to measure user values. The National Survey asked anglers, hunters and wild-life watchers about the number of recreational trips taken in 2006 and the average cost per trip. Respondents were then asked how much money would have been too much to pay per trip. This question, in a different form, was asked again in case there had been a misunderstanding. As-suming a linear demand curve, annual net economic value can be calculated using the difference be-tween current cost and the maxi-mum costs at the intercept, (i.e. the “choke price”) in combination with the number of recreational trips taken. Contingent valuation data from the National Survey are studied only to determine use values and do not measure non-use values. Public Use Values for Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Projects The net economic benefits of wildlife-related recreation vary considerably depending on the particular site and the activity involved. Wildlife-recreationists differ widely according to income, activity, skill, knowledge, and other personal factors. Even the places we decide to explore differ in location, scenery, time of year, accessibility, and other factors. To approximate the likely range of user values for each of the fol-lowing examples, use estimates derived from similar activities in the same state are applied. The $14 billion, approximately $25 billion 2012 dollars, (See Apportionment Data, Appendix) spent on restoration and manage-ment does not entirely reflect the national economic benefits of wildlife management attributable to the 75-year-old Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program. Although it is not possible to put a value on all the wildlife restora-tion projects funded in part by WSFR monies, a representative sample demonstrates the pro-gram’s success. Big Game Hunting: Crex Meadows Wildlife Management Area, Wisconsin Crex Meadows, at 30,000 acres, is one of the largest state-owned wildlife areas in Wisconsin. Origi-nally part of the Wisconsin Pine Barrens, Crex is now the state’s largest remaining portion of this sensitive savanna community. As a result of intense wetland and prairie restoration practices, 22 miles of dikes now flood 6,000 acres of marsh. Extensive pre-scribed burning is conducted annually for habitat improvement. Today, more than 9,000 sandhill cranes use Crex as a staging area and thousands of ducks and geese Valuing the Benefits of Wildlife 23 Sandhill cranes are just one of the migratory bird species found at Crex Meadows. Credit: NEBRASKAland Magazine/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission 24 Status Review and Conservation Recommendations for the Gull-billed Tern $80,000, of which approximately $48,000 each year was financed by Pittman-Robertson funds. Hunters in Georgia bagged 27,323 turkeys in 2009 during 1.2 million hunting days. Using aver-age daily expenditures for food, lodging, transportation, and fees for Georgia hunters, it is esti-mated that hunters seeking wild turkey spent about $31 million (in 2009 dollars). Contingent valuation estimates were not available for wild turkey per se, but turkey (and deer) is considered big game in the 2006 Survey. Contingent value esti-mates for deer hunting is about Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program some of Wisconsin’s best bear and waterfowl hunting. Estimated net economic benefits for hunting in 2009 at Crex totaled nearly $2.6 million, based on a value per day of $87. The benefits accrued from just 25 percent of wildlife-recre-ationists at Crex demonstrate the powerful economic effect wildlife recreation can have on an area in a single year with minimal invest-ment. Wild Turkeys: Georgia North America’s wild turkey population was nearly extirpated in the early 1900s due to habitat degradation and unregulated market hunting. As recently as 1973, Georgia’s estimated wild turkey populations numbered only 17,000 birds. That same year, Georgia DNR began an intensive turkey restocking program. Concluding in 1996, the program has restored the bird to most of its original range, with the population now numbered at some 300,000 birds. In 1980, the average annual cost of the restoration program was about Today, more than 7 million birds thrive throughout North America, thanks to the efforts of conservation partners. Credit: NEBRASKAland Magazine/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission Figure 1 Name of Section observed. Since its inception, waterfowl hunting has also been an important activity at Fountain Grove. Goose hunting for Canada, White-fronted and snow geese continues to be a popular pastime in north central Missouri. Hunters bagged an average of 1.29 Canada geese per day during the month-long prescribed wa-terfowl season in 2011. More than 1,700 hunters visited Fountain Grove Conservation Area during the regular duck season, spending a total of about $95,000. The National Survey no longer determines contingent valuation estimates for waterfowl hunting. However, these questions were asked in the 1985 Survey and, adjusting for inflation, the data gathered gives an estimated net economic benefit for waterfowl hunting at Fountain Grove in 2011 of $82,156, based on a value of $46 per day. Waterfowl hunting is one example of the difficulty in isolating the benefits of a single project from other national wildlife manage-ment efforts. Visitors to Fountain Grove and similar sites enjoy the benefits of wildlife management projects in distant locations that provide habitat and food for mi- $58 per day (2009 dollars) for Georgia state residents and $63 for non-residents (2009 dollars). Using a value of $61 per day gives estimated net economic benefits of hunting wild turkeys in Georgia in 2009 of about $70.1 million. It is an interesting aside that tur-key hunting is increasing in popu-larity at a time when participation in most other forms of hunting is decreasing. Figure 1 demon-strates the significant increase in the number of days hunters in Georgia sought wild turkey. The relationship of estimated ben-efits to costs of this program is remarkable. The dollars used for restoration over the entire life of the turkey restoration program are far less than the net economic benefits of hunting wild turkeys in Georgia in 2009 alone. Waterfowl Hunting: Fountain Grove Conservation Area, Missouri Fountain Grove Conservation Area was the first wetland man-agement area developed by the Missouri Conservation Commis-sion. It is an important migra-tion stop for a variety of wildlife. Sitting in the floodplain of the Grand River, Pittman-Robertson funds assisted in the purchase of the initial 3,433 acres in 1947 for $6.2 million (2011 dollars). As a result of extensive clear-ing, draining, and cultivation of surrounding wetlands, Fountain Grove gradually deteriorated into a silting basin for increasingly constricted river flows, signifi-cantly degrading the wetlands. In view of declining duck populations and other considerations in 1960, the Missouri Conservation Com-mission decided to develop the area primarily as goose habitat. Acquisitions have expanded the management area to its present size of 7,154 acres. There are significant public uses of Fountain Grove for a variety of outdoor recreation activities. The area is managed to provide diverse wetland habitats, includ-ing marshes, bottomland forests, grain fields, oxbow lakes, and sloughs. Throughout the win-ter, bald eagles are commonly Valuing the Benefits of Wildlife 25 gratory populations. Some of the benefits of investments at Foun-tain Grove really belong to other projects elsewhere, but some of the costs at Fountain Grove are offset as well by benefits at other sites. Nonconsumptive Uses: Swan Island Wildlife Management Area, Maine Swan Island is one of only two state-owned wildlife management areas in Maine where camping is allowed and education pro-grams are provided for visitors. Abundant migrating waterfowl, wild turkeys, white-tailed deer, and bald eagles provide excellent wildlife watching opportunities on the Island. In the 1940s the Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife, through the use of Pittman-Robertson funds, began buying Swan Island farms. Since becoming state operated, Swan Island’s existing township remains relatively unaltered. In fact, a number of the original buildings still stand and, in 1995, the Maine Historic Preservation Commission successfully had Swan Island listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Each year, from the first day of May through Labor Day in Despite widespread drought, USFWS reported record numbers of waterfowl with an es-timated population totaling 48.6 million in spring 2012 in the traditional survey areas. Credit: Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries 26 C Setleabtruast iRnge tvhiee wW Ialndldif eC aonnds Seprovrat tFioisnh RReesctoomramtioenn Pdraotgiroanms for the Gull-billed Tern September, some 3,000 to 4,000 visitors come to Swan Island. An-nual revenue from public use fees have ranged from a low of $5,000 to a high of $18,000. In 2009, the operating cost was approximately $96,500, with about $16,700 re-ceived in visitor fees. Wildlife observation is the major recreational use on Swan Island. With an average of 3,500 visitors in 2009, the value of Swan Island for wildlife-associated recreation is $336,000, based on a value per year of $90. Swan Island’s operat-ing costs are about a quarter of the net economic benefits of wildlife observation. Fishing and Nonconsumptive Uses: Skagit Wildlife Management Area, Washington The Skagit Wildlife Management Area is located on the Skagit Bay estuary and consists of 16,700 acres of intertidal mud flats and marsh. Four hundred and fifty acres are in agricultural food plots for use by waterfowl. Currently, the principal project involves enhancement and restoration of degraded habitats to help threat-ened Chinook salmon popula-tions recover. The recent federal Endangered Species Act listing of Chinook salmon as threatened in the Skagit watershed is shift-ing management priorities of the Skagit Wildlife Management Area. The Skagit River system was once home to one of the largest runs of wild Chinook salmon in Puget Sound. By 1999, how-ever, the number of returning wild spawning spring Chinook had dropped below 500 fish and the National Marine Fisheries Service listed Puget Sound Chi-nook as “threatened” under the Endangered Species Act. The major recreation uses of Skagit include waterfowl hunting, fishing, wildlife observation, hik-ing, boating, and kayaking. Be-cause of its proximity to Seattle and other population centers, the Skagit has become one of the more important publicly-owned wildlife areas in Washington State, with 110,065 use days in 2005. The land acquisitions for Skagit Wildlife Management Area were made thanks to a variety of fund-ing sources, including $122,000 in Pittman-Robertson funds in the 1950s, as well as land exchange agreements with Bureau of Reclamation, general state funds, and private donations. Currently, 75 percent of operation and main-tenance costs are funded with P-R money. Fishing values have been esti-mated from the 2006 Survey. Public use for this activity was 8,300 fishing days, with related visitor expenditures of $260,000. Non-consumptive use of the Skagit Wildlife Management Area was nearly 77,350 days in 2005. Total expenditures for wildlife observation, the most prominent non-consumptive use on Skagit, exceeded $1 million. Estimated net economic benefits of trout fishing were $207,500, based on a value per day of $25. It is also possible to estimate the net economic benefits of non-consumptive uses from the 2006 Survey. Wildlife watching yields an estimated $1.9 million in economic benefits, based on a value of $25 per day. Estimated net economic benefits of fishing and non-consumptive use on the Skagit totaled $2.1 million in 2006. Conclusion Hunting in Alaska is a dream-come- true for most big game hunters. Bison, one of the last iconic animals of the American West, are legally hunted in certain areas of the State. Each year roughly 15,000 hunters apply for 100 permits, and on average about 74 bison are harvested. The bag limit for residents is one bison every ten years and non-residents may only bag one animal per lifetime. Due to the small number of tags available, combined with the mystical attraction and zeal for the animal, out-of-state hunt-ers are willing to pay upwards of $5,000 for this chance of a lifetime to hunt bison in Alaska. These examples demonstrate that the benefits from Pittman- Robertson and Dingell-Johnson funded projects have been very large relative to the modest public investments which estab-lished and maintain them. Much of the economic impact goes to rural areas, with relatively de-pressed local economies, so that expenditures of visitors to these areas improve the distribution of economic activity in the nation as a whole. The examples discussed in this section represent typical wildlife management program use values and benefits. There are instances, such as bison hunting in Alaska, which demonstrate dramatic success stories. Because of the number of visitors to these sites, the total annual benefits of wildlife-related recreation are quite large relative to costs in each case. It’s important to keep in mind that we only quantified part of the public use benefits in each area, and have done noth-ing with existence, option and bequest values. Some studies Credit: Missouri Department of Natural Resources Valuing theN Baemneefi otsf oSf eWctilidolnif e 2277 have estimated these non-user values at roughly twice the size of user values. If this is true, then our traditional emphasis on hunting-related expenditures and user values may have led to gross understatements of the actual value of wildlife resources to the Nation. References Decker, Daniel J. and Gary R. Goff. 1987. Valuing Wildlife- Economic and Social Perspectives. Colorado: Westview Press Inc. Freeman, Chris. “Data Request for Use Values at Fountain Grove.” Personal Com-munications 03/14/2012. The 2011 Survey estimates that over 17% of the 71.8 million wildlife watchers participated in away-from-home wildlife photography. Credit: Christina Triantafilidis Garrett, John, Belinda Schuster and Donna Gleisner. 2006. “Skagit Wildlife Area Management Plan.” Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. Hoffman, Steven. “Data Request for Use Values at Crex M eadows.” Personal Com-munications 12/15/2011. Johnson, Reed. 1980. “Wildlife Benefits and Economic Values.” In Harmon Killman, ed. 1987. Restoring America’s Wildlife, 1937-1987: The First 50 Years of the Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration (Pittman-Robertson) Act. U.S. Depart-ment of Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service. Martin, Roland. 2010. “L.D. 398- Resolve, To Develop a Management Plan for the Nonwildlife Components of Sawn Island and Little Sawn Island in Perkins Town-ship, Sagadahoc County.” A Report to the Joint Standing Committee on Inland Fisheries and Wildlife., Maine. U.S. Department of Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service and U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. 2006 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation. Is-sued October, 2007. 2288 C Setleabturast iRnge tvhiee wW ialdnldif eC aonnd sSeprovrat tFioisnh RReesctoormatmioenn Pdraogtiroanms for the Gull-billed Tern Name of Section 29 including college graduates. For example, in Wyoming, fishery management crews were employed to conduct watershed surveys to measure species’ distributions and abundance to reduce the need for fish stocking (Wiley 1995). To see some of the best projects achieved across the country using SFR funding, one only has to examine the Outstanding SFR awards presented annually by the Fisheries Administration Section of the American Fisheries Society. Winners constitute a “Who’s Who” list of innovation, creativity, and application in fisheries management and development, research and surveys, and aquatic education using SFR funds. SFR funds are used to support a wide variety of programs, projects, and activities, but there are some standard uses of the funds that occur in most states. Many states have been able to build and operate new state-of-the-art fish hatcheries because of SFR funding. All states use SFR funds to monitor fish populations and assess how management practices influence their recruitment, growth, and mortality. Studies of human influences on fish populations, particularly angling, are also important SFR-funded activities, typically evaluated through angler creel surveys. Data collected are used to implement and evaluate regulations, establish harvest quotas, and document constituent demographics, behaviors, and opinions. Property has been purchased or leased, developed, operated, and maintained with SFR funds, and aquatic habitat has been preserved, restored, and enhanced Reliable Funding Source Benefits America’s Sport Fisheries Don Gabelhouse, Fisheries Administrator Nebraska Game and Parks Commission Today, 62 years after legislation was passed to create the Dingell- Johnson program, state fish and wildlife agencies are accustomed to receiving DJ/Wallop-Breaux Sport Fish Restoration (SFR) apportionments. We probably take the program for granted, because it has been a constant, reliable funding source for more than 60 years. Perhaps the best way to portray the importance of the SFR program to state fish and wildlife agencies is to imagine what our programs might look like today without it, and consider all of the great things that would not have been accomplished if these funds were not available. Without the SFR program, we would be looking at significantly smaller state agency budgets. A survey of state fish and wildlife agencies in 2001 found that SFR funding constituted an average of 44 percent of inland fisheries program expenditures in the 41 states responding (Gabelhouse 2005). This percentage ranged from 11 percent in Missouri to 75 percent in Hawaii, Indiana, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, and Texas. The face of fisheries management would look far different today in most states, without the SFR program. Your state’s 1950 guide to fishing regulations will remind you about what fisheries management amounted to before the DJ program began. How many of the differences between then and now are due to advances made possible because of the SFR program? Perhaps most importantly, the DJ program provided the resources that allowed state fish and wildlife agencies to hire more employees, in both marine and freshwater environments. Man-made impoundments have been built, including fish-friendly features, thanks to the SFR program, and angling and boating access have been established and improved. Although most of the research conducted with SFR funding is applied, information generated from basic research on fish life history, behavior, genetics, and ecology is sometimes required to manage fish populations effectively. Such research would often not be accomplished if funding were limited to just fishing license/ permit revenues. Since 1950, a 10% excise tax on sport fishing equipment has helped fund America’s fisher-ies. Credit: NEBRASKAland Magazine/Ne-braska Game and Parks Comission Credit: Missiouri Department of Natural Resources. Reliable Funding Source Benefits America’s Sport Fisheries 30 Status Review and Conservation Recommendations for the Gull-billed Tern While the SFR program provides up to 75 percent of project costs, the 25 percent non-federal match can be an important obstacle for some state fisheries programs. A significant decrease in the numbers of anglers will impact the amount of revenue available from fishing license and permit sales. Given the dependence most state fisheries programs have on those funds, it is sometimes daunting for a state to achieve its matching funds requirement Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program in order to fund all that could or should be done, if the state lacks the necessary operating budget. Today, as is the case with many other underfunded programs, it often takes partnerships for SFR to be completely effective. Needed work can still be accomplished despite austere state budgets if non-federal partners are willing to provide the matching funds. Additionally, SFR program support may be even more important in the future if angler numbers continue to decline and revenue from fishing licenses and permits does not keep pace with inflation. Twenty years ago, outreach, marketing, and promotion were not considered important components of most state fisheries programs; rather, the “build it and they will come” philosophy prevailed. Today, considerable effort is directed toward understanding, communicating with, educating, influencing, recruiting, developing, and retaining anglers and other constituents. SFR funding helps pay for many of these efforts. As we continue to face new challenges, such as the appearance of new aquatic invasive species, habitat fragmentation, global climate change, and ever-increasing competition for water, funding through the SFR program remains vital. To maintain this program, as well as our base funding, we need to do a better job of communicating how our work, with help from the SFR program, not only benefits American fisheries, but also our quality of life. References Gabelhouse, D.W., Jr. 2005. Staffing, spending, and funding of state inland fisheries programs. Fisheries 30:10-17. Wiley, R.W. 1995. A common sense protocol for the use of hatchery-reared trout. American Fisheries Society Symposium 15:465-471. Lake Wanahoo, a Lower Platte North Resource District reservoir near Wahoo Lake nearly full with construction underway on recreation facilities. (Grant # NE F162B) Credit: NEBRASKAland Magazine/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission Brenda Pracheil, biologist, scans the rostrum of a paddlefish netted below Fort Randall Dam to determine if it contained an electronic tag identifying it as a hatchery-raised fish. Credit: NEBRASKAland Magazine/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission Fishing and HunNtiangm Lei coefn Ssee Tctrieonnd s 31 32 Status Review and Conservation Recommendations for the Gull-billed Tern Name of Section Preserving Virginia’s Wild Heritage Virginia Shepherd (Retired) Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries In 1929, A. Willis Robertson, the beleaguered chairman of the Virginia Commission of Game and Inland Fisheries wrote: “Anyone who has an idea that a public job is a bed of roses should just lie on it for a few months and he will soon find that the thorns are more prominent than the perfume.” These words undoubtedly echoed the frustration felt by his fellow state fish and wildlife commission-ers across the country in the early 1930s. Though charged to protect their state’s wildlife legacy, fish and game agencies were—without exception—underfunded, under-staffed, and politically controlled. Most relied on hunting and fishing license fees as the chief source of income to carry out enormous responsibilities; however, these funds were sorely inadequate and perpetually threatened by cash-strapped state legislatures. Simply put, state fish and wildlife agencies alone could not rescue the country’s imperiled fish and wildlife resources. The science of wildlife management was in its infancy. Even the most basic understanding of populations, life histories, habitat require-ments, and species interactions was patchy at best— and grossly flawed at worst. The Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit Program, providing academic training in professional wildlife management, would not be established until 1935. No state agency had the funds, the knowledge, or trained personnel to effectively restore and manage its own fish and wild-life populations. Virtually the only management tools fish and wildlife agencies had at their disposal were the setting of hunting seasons, bag limits, and methods of hunting. But even these were used as political tools, wielded by state legislators and carried out by ill-equipped, politically-appointed game wardens more concerned with ferrying voters to the polls than enforcing hunting and fish-ing regulations. In December of 1931, after five frustrating years as head of Virginia’s fish and game agency, A. Willis Robertson wrote to his politically-appointed Commission board members: “Frankly, I cannot point with any degree of pride to a substan-tial increase in either game or fish during the past 5 years of our Preserving Virginia’s Wild Heritage 33 administration…Unless, there-fore, our Commission looks these facts squarely in the eye and develops some way of increasing the supply of wild life without reducing the shooting privilege to the point where the average hunter will quit in disgust, our administration of this natural resource is going to be regarded as a failure.” It took six more years for that way to be found—and it would happen on a national scale, breaking new ground as the most ambitious initiative ever launched to save America’s fish and wildlife legacy. The initiative mapped out a federal-state matching pro-gram, whereby federal monies would be matched with state funds on a 3:1 basis. Robertson Robertson’s twenty-nine words heard around the conservation world. Credit: Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries. 34 Status Review and Conservation Recommendations for the Gull-billed Tern and wildlife work has been a high priority for P-R funding. In Vir-ginia, every category of wildlife has received attention through applied wildlife research and data collection. In 1947, the State initiated a manda-tory big game checking system and the information gathered every year since then has been part of an effort to record important data for evaluat-ing the status of various species of wildlife. The knowledge gained from P-R funded research and surveys provides the basis for hunting and trapping season recommendations made by the Department’s staff of professional wildlife biologists. Not only does the P-R program fund the management of game species, but it has also helped DGIF fulfill its P-R program allowed Virginia to focus on long-range wildlife research projects, habitat resto-ration, education, and technical assistance to landowners. P-R funds supported the first-ever comprehensive study of wild tur-key, published in 1943 by Henry S. Mosby at Virginia Tech. This landmark achievement in the field of wildlife management set the stage for the restoration of wild turkey populations nationwide. The cannon-projected net trap, originally developed for water-fowl in Missouri in 1948 by H.H. Dill and W. H. Thornsbery, gave Eastern turkey biologists the tool they needed to put their knowl-edge to work. Using this technol-ogy, Virginia embarked upon a 40- year effort to restore turkeys into suitable habitat around the state. During this time approximately 900 turkeys were trapped and re-located, and today Virginia turkey hunters enjoy their sport in every county in the state. An estimated population of some 150,000 birds supports both a spring and fall season of 60,000-70,000 hunters. At the same time newly-trained biologists were working to restore wildlife populations in Virginia, the number of hunters and an-glers taking to the woods nation-wide skyrocketed. In the 1950s, hunting and fishing revenue in Virginia alone doubled from $1 million to $2 million, and the number of hunters and anglers increased from 400,000 to nearly 1,000,000 in a single decade. The P-R program allowed DGIF to respond to the surge in demand for hunting and fishing opportuni-ties by purchasing 45,000 acres of public hunting and fishing lands, increasing office and field person-nel, and providing technical assis-tance to improve wildlife habitat on more than one million acres of private land. By 1976, DGIF was managing nearly 2 million acres of land either owned directly or managed cooperatively. More than half of the land owned by DGIF was purchased with P-R dollars. The research necessary for ef-fective “on-the-ground” habitat seized the opportunity to use his experiences in Virginia to add a provision to the bill, requiring states to enact laws prohibiting the diversion of hunting license revenue from fish and game agency coffers. With a mere 29 words, Robertson ensured that a sustained and politically untouch-able source of funding would be available for long-term wildlife restoration. Seventy-five years later, the Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration (Pittman-Robertson) Program has proven its worth as the nation’s most effective tool used to restore and sustain the nation’s fish and wildlife legacy. Once passed, the Pittman-Robert-son (P-R) Program immediately be-gan to provide states the matching funds necessary to launch legitimate wildlife restoration work. Virginia’s Department of Game and Inland Fisheries (DGIF), like other states, first looked to restore depleted wildlife populations. Its White-tailed deer population had decreased statewide from an estimated 400,000 animals to a mere 25,000. Using P-R funds, Virginia purchased adult deer from North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Alabama and released the animals into suit-able habitat. So significant was the success of these restoration efforts that from 1930 to 1957, Virginia’s deer harvest rose from 1,299 to a record 22,473. Today, the state boasts an annual harvest of 231,000 and a deer population of one million animals. By the 1940s, support from the Celebrating the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program Virginia DGIF personnel rekease deer purchased from other states. Credit: Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries Relocated turkeys released. Credit: Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries PR dollars fund trained biologists and research. Credit: Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries Preserving VirgNinaiam’se W oifld S Heecrtiitoang e 3355 mandate to ensure the health of all wildlife in Virginia, including such species as the bald eagle, the Virginia northern flying squir-rel, and the piping plover. The P-R program has helped fuel the development of the Depart-ment’s Wildlife Action Plan, a coordinated driving force for all wildlife conservation efforts across Virginia. It utilizes public and private partnerships to help protect and restore endangered species and sustain healthy populations of common species as well. Further supporting the research arm of Virginia’s wildlife program are P-R funded regional projects, including the Southeast-ern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study, which provides southeast-ern wildlife agencies access to resources otherwise unavailable to any single state organization. In 1970-71, the state’s role in hunter education received a substantial boost when the P-R Act was expanded to include the receipts from a ten percent excise tax on handguns and an 11 percent excise tax on the sale of archery equipment. In Virginia, DGIF manages a free, mandatory hunter education program for 12- to 15-year-old children and first-time hunters using a dedicated cadre of more than 900 trained volunteer instructors. Thanks to financial support from the P-R program, these volunteers work with 160 DGIF Conservation Po-lice Officers and train 13,000 stu-dents each year. Since 1988, there The PR program benefits many species including the bald eagle. Credit: Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries has been a 25 percent reduction in the rate of hunting-related shooting incidents statewide. In 2007, the program recorded more than 500,000 graduates of the course. The Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act has proven a remarkable framework to restore and safeguard the future of our nation’s fish and wildlife legacy. Undoubtedly, the accomplish-ments of the program throughout the past 75 years have exceeded the expectations of even the bold-est of its early visionaries. How-ever, the responsibility for the health of America’s fish and wild-life demands constant vigilance. In Virginia alone, 925 species have been identified as wildlife species of greatest conservation need, and the habitats they live in are threatened by development, fragmentation, and degradation. The challenges we face today are no less daunting than they were 75 years ago. However, since 1937 the Wildlife Restoration Program has provided us with the means to respond to overwhelming odds with boldness, inspiration, and steady, informed action. It is our responsibility to protect the future of our wildlife populations and the integrity of their habitat. Once again, we must figure out a way to do it. Loss of wildlife habitat remains a future concern. Credit: Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries 36 C Setleabtruast iRnge tvhiee wW ialdnldife C aonnd s Seprovratt Fioisnh RReesctoomramtioenn Pdraotgiroanms for the Gull-billed Tern Name of Section 37 issue hunter certifications. As more states followed suit, the International Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies (IAFWA) appointed a “Hunter Safety Com-mittee” in 1957, and, in 1966, the NRA hosted the first national “Hunter Safety Coordinators Workshop.” This evolution led to the formation in 1972 of the North American Association of Hunter Safety Coordinators (NAAHSC), now known as the International Hunter Education Association or IHEA. It was at this time, in 1970 and 1972, respectively, that Congress passed key amend-ments to the Pittman-Robertson (P-R) Act, allowing states to fund hunter education programs and develop target ranges as part of their already successful wild-life conservation programs. In 1974, NAAHSC affiliated with the IAFWA, and since then, all 50 states (as well as territories, Canadian provinces and other countries) have passed manda-tory laws, requiring hunters of varying age groups to complete hunter education courses prior to purchasing hunting licenses and going afield. Today, IHEA serves as a modern-day clearinghouse for information and caretaker of the hunting accident (incident) database – a role turned over to it by the National Safety Council. The success of hunter education is one of the hallmark achievem |
Date created | 2013-01-02 |
Date modified | 2013-03-15 |
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