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Game commission wants to move opening day of deer season

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    The Pennsylvania Game Commission is looking at moving opening day of deer season to the Saturday after Thanksgiving. LISA PRICE/S TIMES NEWS

Published January 29. 2019 10:44AM

 

Change tradition? Or create opportunity?

Pennsylvania Game Commission officials met Tuesday to discuss and set the 2019-2020 hunting and trapping season dates. The hot button topic? Changing the opening day of the state’s rifle season on white-tailed deer to the first Saturday after Thanksgiving, instead of the traditional opening day, the first Monday after Thanksgiving.

Game Commission officials decided it was worth it to change tradition, saying it would help build the state’s hunting heritage. Season opening and closing dates will be officially approved at the PGC’s April meeting.

Opinions from hunters vary. Many of the state’s hunters say that they should also be able to hunt on Sundays, but that’s not a decision the PGC can make. Sunday hunting is prohibited by Pennsylvania Title 34 of the state game law; the prohibition can only be removed by legislation.

Pine Grove hunter Craig Morgan, retired, past director of the Schuylkill Conservation District, is in favor of the change.

“Saturday opener, you bet, and then Sunday when legislators pass it,” Morgan said. “Gives kids, college students and working people more time to hunt and that’s what it’s all about for those of us who love to mentor kids.”

Some need more time to digest the idea.

“I have mixed emotions about it — on one hand I like that they’re trying to make the opener more accessible to people that may not be able to take time off from work, college students and youth,” said Jason Krause, Krause Taxidermy, Pine Grove. “But without Sunday hunting opportunities I don’t really know if one day is going to bring throngs of people back to the sport.”

Dave Andrews of Andrews Archery in Frackville said the change will mean an extremely-crowded opening day, and fewer numbers on Monday, the traditional opener, and the next Saturday.

“I guess the woods will be a lot more crowded. Everybody will probably be able to get out the first day,” Andrews said. “People who had to work the first Monday didn’t get out until Saturday and at that point a lot of people already had their buck — it was like hunting in shifts.”

“It’s a mess on the first day; now it’ll be a bigger mess.”

Harold Daub of Tower City, an avid hunter who’s working tirelessly for HUSH (Hunters United for Sunday Hunting), pointed out that the HUSH group is currently focused on expanding Sunday hunting opportunities for small game, not big game. The group is working with legislators and several bills are pending, including one which would increase the trespass penalty and give game wardens the power to cite hunters for trespass violations.

Daub and others are talking to legislators about the loss of potential PA revenue, and they are taking notice. Legislators and PGC officials have also noticed the gradual decline in license sales.

Statistics from the 2014-2015 season show 771,004 male hunters and 81,954 female hunters. In 2015, those numbers were 762,454 and 85,058; overall, a decline of 5,446 in license sales. Why is that happening?

“Whenever surveys are taken asking why Pennsylvanians either stopped hunting, or never hunted, the biggest barrier identified is ‘time’ and it is the most-commonly reported answer to the question,” Daub said. “Therefore, if we could have the PGC review the possibility of hunting some additional species on Sundays, it would clearly eliminate as much of the “time” barrier as would be possible.”

Daub said that license sales and hunter retention and recruitment aren’t just for people.

“We need to remove this barrier of limited time as much as possible to optimize the recruitment, retention, and reactivation of PA hunters — and there are 480 wildlife species in PA that are counting on the conservation programs funded by PA hunters who pursue just 62 game and furbearing species that we are permitted to hunt.”

 

Comments
I miss hunting, but what drove me to stop hunting is the infinite laws and regulations surrounding the hunt. I don't subscribe to chaos and lawlessness, but, the PGC has gotten way out of control in their role to control. It's easiest for me to just say no. Imagine if all would just say no?
Yeah! We just be able shoot whatever, whoever, whenever we want yee haaaw! Kill'em all ! Extinction, pollution, ecological destruction! MAGA! you're an assclown meyers.
But, I for one am glad you don't hunt anymore. You're One less sicko stroking his gun barrel in public.
Well there goes any idea of going out hiking on the Saturday of Thanksgiving weekend. To open up Sunday's really puts the screws to people who like to do things in the woods other than hunting. I hope the politicians decide that 6 days a week for hunting is enough. Give the rest of us a day to enjoy the outdoors.
You have 49 weeks a year to hike etc
Hunters license fees go to the use of the land including making trails ...What do you pay for?
SUNDAY Hunting should also be allowed to generate additional revenue for the hotels, eateries, etc..
Think the loss of hunting license revenue from the statistics in the article means a loss of at minimum of 109K per year there goes the money for maintaining and purchasing more State Land for EVERYONE to enjoy
Never was a hunter but i must agree with Hunter18210 and i have no clue who this person is. You have many hunting seasons through out the year in this state so why not allow saturday hunting for all seasons. You should be wearing some kind of blaze orange when and if you hike on any trails anyway.
As an avid outdoor lover, and a non-hunter, I have to agree with you.Plus, there are plenty of places for people to enjoy the outdoors all 52 weeks of the year without infringing on hunting grounds. If for whatever reason they made a "hiking license" I would gladly pay the fee if the money generated went to improving trails, etc. Again, I don't hunt, but defintly see the need for it whether it be population control, revenue, etc. And PA would hurt even worse economically without this revenue.

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