The bill was a compilation of 19 bipartisan bills important to the sportsmen's community to support public-land access for hunters and anglers as well as conservation of habitat and wildlife. The bill focuses on two issues important to DU and our members: 1) habitat conservation and; 2) increasing access for hunting.
Several of the hunting and fishing bills included in this legislation have passed the House of Representatives on a bipartisan basis as part of H.R. 4089, which DU also strongly supported.
BILL OVERVIEW
Nearly 35 million acres of existing public land have no or restricted access. Sportsmen cite the loss of access as the number one reason they quit hunting or fishing.
This bill reauthorizes Federal Lands Transaction Facilitation Act, which uses a "land for land" approach to improve access.
It also creates a 1.5 percent set aside from LWCF to specifically address access issues by purchasing inholdings in existing public lands and securing easements to access-restricted acreage.
Sportsmen and women are significant financial contributors to habitat conservation. Since 1934, funds raised from the Duck Stamp have conserved 5 million acres of wetland habitat. Ninety-eight cents of every dollar go directly to conserving wetlands. This bill allows the Secretary of Interior to permanently offer an electronic duck stamp and to reevaluate the price of the Duck Stamp every three years, assuring the stamp price can match inflation. The price of the stamp was last raised in 1991 to $15. In the meantime, land prices have skyrocketed, and the acreage purchased with funds from stamp sales has been decreasing.
ECONOMICS
This bill will have no cost to the taxpayers; it doesn't score under Congressional budget rules.
According to the Western Governors' Association, outdoor recreation contributed $646 billion in direct spending to the U.S. economy in 2011.
Outdoor recreation supports 2.3 million jobs throughout the Western U.S. alone, with nearly $110 billion in payroll.
SUPPORTERS
More than 56 national conservation and wildlife groups supported the bill (see list below).