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To: ALL MEDIA
For immediate release
August 6, 2009 |
For more information contact:
Bill Brassard Jr.
203-426-1320 |
Firearms Industry Rejects National Park Service
Classification of Traditional Ammunition
as a Health Threat; Offers to Work
with NPS on Hunter Education Efforts
NEWTOWN, Conn.--In response to an announcement today regarding a National
Parks Service program encouraging hunters to voluntarily switch to
alternative ammunition, the National Shooting Sports Foundation rejected
NPS's categorization of traditional ammunition as a health threat. NSSF is
offering to work with the National Park Service to develop measures to
educate hunters about steps they can take to prevent scavengers from
ingesting lead fragments of spent traditional ammunition. The park service
is proposing to ban, at a minimum, the use of lead bullets, shot and sinkers
in the park system by NPS personnel.
While no scientific evidence supports restricting the use of traditional
ammunition containing lead components, the firearms industry believes that
establishing voluntary measures is a more reasoned step than banning
traditional ammunition, a drastic policy decision unsupported by science.
NPS has raised concerns that lead bullet fragments found in game meat could
cause lead poisoning in humans, a charge not borne out in scientific
studies, including a recent Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
report.
"While we're not opposed to voluntary measures, we maintain there is no need
for them," said Steve Sanetti, president of NSSF, the trade association for
the firearms and ammunition industry. "The firearms industry supports
science-based decisions about wildlife management. Under current
regulations, there is no scientific evidence showing that the health of
wildlife populations and humans is at risk from the use of traditional
ammunition."
In a press release, Grand Teton National Park and National Elk Refuge
officials encouraged hunters to voluntarily switch to alternative ammunition
during the 2009 elk and bison seasons. The voluntary measures are being
advocated even though the manager of the elk refuge has told NSSF there have
been no population impacts on ravens and eagles connected with the use of
traditional ammunition.
NSSF says that educational messages can help inform hunters about options
related to voluntary measures, such as how to choose alternative ammunition
and how burying game entrails can reduce the chance of scavenger birds
ingesting fragments from spent bullets in game carcasses. "Hunters were the
first conservationists and are second to none in their support of and
concern for wildlife," said Sanetti. "Surveys have shown that hunters are
agreeable to taking voluntary measures, and our educational efforts in
California to promote the burying of entrails was successful. We would like
to work with NPS on this."
The use of traditional ammunition does not pose a health risk to human
beings, a fact underscored by a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
study on North Dakota hunters who consumed game. The study showed there was
no reason for concern over eating game taken with traditional ammunition.
There has never been a documented case of lead poisoning among humans who
have eaten game harvested with traditional ammunition.
Earlier in the year, the park service announced a ban on traditional
ammunition that applied to park personnel involved with culling sick and
wounded animals and indicated it would consider widening the ban to all
hunters. The firearms industry and conservation groups criticized the ban in
a press release, calling it "arbitrary, over-reactive and not based on
science."
"In some areas today, wildlife management is being driven by fear of
litigation, not by science," said Lawrence G. Keane, NSSF senior vice
president and general counsel.
For example, in California the Fish and Game Commission was forced to
consider expanding a ban on traditional ammunition in areas protected for
the California condor in response to a lawsuit settlement. Today, however,
the commission followed the recommendation of the Fish & Game Department and
recommended not to expand a ban on traditional ammunition in those areas.
The department had previously cited lack of conclusive evidence to support
an expansion of the ban.
Said Keane, "Any decision made about federal lands with regard to ammunition
products should be based on thorough scientific study of population impacts.
Currently, there is no scientific evidence that indicates wildlife
populations are being negatively impacted. We are calling on Congress to
step in and provide the necessary oversight to prevent any unilateral
actions by NPS on this issue. To date, the NPS decision-making process has
not been transparent and based on sound, thorough science."
Keane also expressed concern over the cost to hunters forced or coerced into
purchasing alternative ammunition products. "Non-traditional ammunition is
expensive and about doubles the cost of a box of bullets," he stated. "In
these difficult economic times, imposing voluntary or mandated restrictions
on the use of traditional ammunition will serve to keep people from hunting
and have a negative impact on the Pittman-Robertson Conservation Fund."
A portion of the proceeds from the sale of every box of ammunition and each
firearm goes to the Pittman-Robertson Fund, which is the keystone for state
wildlife conservation projects.
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