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- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 1993 18:51:58 EST
- Reply-To: "Norman C. Saunders" <NYS@NIHCU.BITNET>
- Sender: List Owner <davep@acsu.buffalo.edu>
- From: "Norman C. Saunders" <NYS@NIHCU.BITNET>
- Subject: State Wildlife Funding Announced
- Lines: 84
-
- Fish and Wildlife Service
- For Release: January 19, 1993
-
-
- Hugh Vickery 202-208-5634
-
-
- Interior Secretary Lujan Announces Apportionment
- of $351.8 Million For State Wildlife Projects
-
-
- Secretary of the Interior Manuel Lujan today announced $351.8 mil-
- lion raised from Federal excise taxes on hunting and fishing equipment
- will be apportioned to the states for fish and wildlife-related projects
- in the United States and territories this year.
-
- "Hunters and fishermen continue to fund the lion's share of this
- Nation's conservation efforts," Lujan said. "Without the excise taxes
- they pay on hunting and fishing equipment, states would not be able to
- pay for many of the fish and wildlife restoration and recreation pro-
- jects the public has come to take for granted."
-
- The revenues are made available to the states through Interior's
- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
-
- A total of $156.9 million will be apportioned to the states under
- the Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act, commonly referred to as the
- Pittman-Robertson program, after its congressional sponsors. Another
- $194.9 million will be passed along under the Federal Aid in Sport Fish
- Restoration Act, often called the Dingell-Johnson/Wallop-Breaux program.
-
- Excise taxes collected from manufacturers and importers of angling
- and hunting equipment are paid to the U.S. Department of Treasury and
- then transferred to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for distribution
- to the states.
-
- "This money will be spent for everything from building boat ramps
- to restoring vital wetlands to establishing hunter education and safety
- programs," said Mike Hayden, Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife
- and Parks. "It not only conserves wildlife and wildlife habitat but
- also helps everyone enjoy the great outdoors more."
-
- Fish and Wildlife Director John Turner said, "These programs have
- long been the model of enlightened self-interest, ever since anglers and
- hunters lobbied Congress to impose the taxes. They reflect the deep
- love and respect American sportsmen have for wildlife and our natural
- heritage."
-
- The $156.9 million for wildlife restoration and hunter education
- programs for fiscal year 1993 comes from an 11-percent excise tax on
- sporting arms and ammunition, a 10-percent tax on pistols and revolvers,
- and an 11-percent tax on certain archery equipment.
-
- The $194.9 million for sports fish restoration for fiscal year 1993
- results from a 10-percent excise tax on fishing equipment and a 3-per-
- cent tax on electric trolling motors and sonar fish finders. In addi-
- tion, the "Wallop-Breaux" legislation of 1984 increased the tax base
- for sport fish restoration to include a portion of the Federal motorboat
- fuels tax and import duties on fishing tackle and pleasure boats.
-
- The Federal Aid program allows states to set the priorities and de-
- velop projects based on their own wildlife resource needs. Up to 75
- percent of every Sport Fish Restoration and Wildlife Restoration project
- is funded through these apportioned excise taxes while the remaining 25
- percent is funded through state matching funds.
-
- Also in fiscal year 1993, $32.2 million will be used to fund hunter
- education and safety programs. These programs for beginning hunters
- teach safe handling of firearms and archery equipment, respect for
- wildlife, ethical outdoor behavior, wilderness survival, and how to
- avoid hunting accidents. To date, more than 20 million hunters, about
- 700,000 per year, have graduated from state hunter education programs.
-
- ====================================================================
-
- This press release has been brought to you compliments of The Osprey's
- Nest, a computer bulletin board for birders and other amateur natural-
- ists in the Washington, DC area. The Osprey's Nest may be reached 24
- hours per day at 301-989-9036 and answers the phone at 300 to 9600 baud.
-
- The Osprey's Nest is not associated in any way with the U.S. Department
- of the Interior or with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Opinions
- expressed in these press releases are not necessarily those of the sys-
- tem operator of The Osprey's Nest.
-