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Hunting on Sundays has been illegal in Pennsylvania since the 1870s. A bill that would permit some Sunday hunting has stalled in the state House of Representatives.
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Supporter wounds Sunday hunting bill as it enters House

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Supporter wounds Sunday hunting bill as it enters House

Assurances of swift passage of a bill that would permit Sunday hunting were quashed Tuesday by one of the bill’s biggest supporters.

In April, when the Pennsylvania Federation of Sportsmen and Conservationists welcomed Harold Daub as its new executive director, the former leader of Hunters United for Sunday Hunting promised to use his leadership skills to put the federation “on the front lines in Harrisburg so our members can be in the woods, on the water or at the range.” But at a legislative meeting to inform House members about a Senate bill that would permit hunting on some Sundays, Mr. Daub surprised supporters with remarks taken as undiplomatic that effectively set back the cause of Sunday hunting.

As one of several stakeholders speaking to the Game and Fisheries Committee, the Dauphin County man challenged lawmakers whose agricultural constituents followed the lead of the state Farm Bureau in opposition to Senate Bill 147.

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“Is the Pennsylvania Farm Bureau going to bully you, as legislators, into playing their game of running out the clock?” Mr. Daub asked.

Penn­syl­va­nia is cur­renly one of only three states that ha­ven’t lifted a gen­eral no-Sun­day-hunt­ing ban, but re­cent leg­is­la­tion could change that.
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Perceived as bullying itself, the comment drew push-back from members of both parties irked by the accusation they were kowtowing to an interest group.

Rep. David Maloney, R-Berks County, said “bashing” the Farm Bureau was “problematic.” Rep. Kyle Mullins, D-Lackawanna, requested a “more civil tone.” Rep. Clint Owlett, R-Tioga, said of the bullying charge, “there’s enough blame to go around.”

The Senate passed SB 147 in June following 10 years of debate by inviting opponents to help draft the bill, satisfying some of their concerns. The bill would limit Sunday hunting to three days per year and create a new primary offense, “hunting trespass,” enforceable by police and the Game Commission and punishable by high fines and the possible loss of the trespasser’s hunting privileges.

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The bill was expected to slide through the House with minimal debate. Mr. Daub made his comments Tuesday during an informational meeting as the bill was being introduced, and most of his 20-minute statement was firm but polite. After some lawmakers bristled at the bullying remark, he back-stepped, claiming his comment reflected his personal treatment by the bureau.

But it was too late. Rep. Barbara Gleim, R-Cumberland, said she “took a little bit of offense” at the Farm Bureau being “thrown under the bus.” Rep. Ed Neilson, D-Philadelphia, described himself as a “yes” vote going into the meeting, but said it would be difficult to vote that way after being accused of caving in to bullying.

Mr. Daub also had sarcastic words for Joe Neville, executive director of the Keystone Trails Association, who testified his members want one day outdoors without risk of being injured by a hunter.

“If Keystone Trails Association hikers are so afraid of hunters, why are hikes scheduled every day of the week, including during popular hunting seasons?” asked Mr. Daub.

A deer peeks between two trees as the sun sets on Observatory Hill in Perry North, Feb. 3, 2019. A state Senate bill could legalize hunting on some Sundays by 2020.
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Mr. Daub refused an interview request and sent the following statement: “PFSC looks forward to working with legislators, interest groups and individuals on both sides of this issue in order to ensure that sportsmen and women are in the field on Sundays this hunting season.”

Rep. Keith Gillespie, R-York, chairman of the House Game and Fisheries Committee, said he had intended to put the bill up for a vote Sept. 24. But following Tuesday’s awkward exchange, supporters were now in “damage-control mode.”

“It was one stakeholder in particular bashing another,” he said. 

Mr. Gillespie said several lawmakers who had assured him they’d support the bill told him following Mr. Daub’s remarks they could no longer back Sunday hunting.

“I’m not going to put up the vote if it’s going to fail. It would be the end of the story,” Mr. Gillespie said. “After all the emotion that has taken place … we need time for the dust to settle.”

As committee chair, Mr. Gillespie said he would authorize a vote at an appropriate time, but most of his suburban and rural constituents oppose Sunday hunting, and his vote remains uncommitted.

Justin Walsh, R-Westmoreland, a member of the Game and Fisheries Committee, said that following the stakeholder meeting SB 147 did not appear to have the votes to get out of committee.

“Hopefully the bill doesn’t get killed with this,” he said. “I don’t see a problem with the way the Senate bill is [written] … but obviously we realize how important farming is and our farmers.”

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   Post-Gazette Outdoors Poll                                                          

LAST WEEK: Creating a new law with stiff penalties, “hunting trespass,” has helped landowners in other states to keep unwanted hunters off their properties. Will it work in Pennsylvania?

Yes 75 %

No 25 %

This poll is an unscientific tally of web postings generated by Civic Science.

 

First Published: September 12, 2019, 12:00 p.m.

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Hunting on Sundays has been illegal in Pennsylvania since the 1870s. A bill that would permit some Sunday hunting has stalled in the state House of Representatives.  (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)
Harold Daub, executive director of the Pennsylvania Federation of Sportsmen and Conservationists.  (Pennsylvania Federation of Sportsmen and Conservationists)
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
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