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SPORTING NEWS
http://www.njleg.state.nj.us/
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posted 8/17/07
NJDEP Division of Fish & Wildlife - 2007-2008 Game Code Amendments fish & wildlife links About Us E-mail Lists Fishing Hunting Regulations Wildlife Feature Articles Education Merchandise Employment Volunteering Links Contact Us
2007-2008 Game Code Amendments May 17, 2007 The Fish and Game Council adopted amendments to the 2007-2008 Game Code at their May 8, 2007 meeting. The amendments become effective five days after they are published in the NJ Register which should occur in August, 2007. The following changes will be in effect for upcoming seasons. Please refer to the 2007 hunting edition of the Fish and Wildlife Digest, due out in August, for specific season dates and other information. BEAVER & OTTER: The late check-in for pelts is extended from seven to 20 days. FALCONRY: Kestrels are eliminated from apprentice possession. WOODCHUCK HUNTING: The use of rifles is excluded from all State Parks, Forests, and Recreation Areas. OPOSSUM & RACCOON HUNTING: Hunting season dates which were omitted in Code have been restored (October 1 to March 1). DEER HUNTING: 1 - Antler point restrictions are removed from Deer Management Zone 6 only. 2 - The Earn-A-buck regulation is reduced in Regulation Set 8 (Zones 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 36, 41, 49, 50 and 51) to the first three weeks of the Fall Bow season only. Bank-A-Doe is thereby eliminated. 3 - Regulation Set 8's (Zones 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 36, 41, 49, 50 and 51) early, antlerless-only days of the Permit Shotgun and Permit Muzzleloader seasons are moved from Thanksgiving week to the Wednesday, Thursday and Friday after Thanksgiving; the Permit Bow season is added to the Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday of Thanksgiving week. 4 - Antlered Bag Limit/ Permit Season Changes The total legal antlered deer bag limit per individual remains the same, at six deer. The number of antlered deer a hunter is allowed to harvest with each hunting license remains the same. Bow license holders are allowed to harvest an antlered deer in both the Fall Bow and Winter Bow seasons; firearm license holders are still allowed to harvest two antlered deer during the Six-day Firearm season or harvest one antlered deer during Six-day Firearm and one antlered deer during the Permit Shotgun season beginning the Wednesday after the Six-day Firearm Season. If a second antlered deer is not taken during the Six-day Firearm Season, a Shotgun Permit holder may purchase a Bonus Shotgun Permit to harvest an antlered deer during the shotgun permit season following the Six-day Firearm season. A supplemental tag to allow a hunter to bag a second antlered deer during the Six-day Firearm season will be issued at the deer check station when a hunter checks in the first deer. This supplemental tag will be valid only for the Six-day Firearm season. Bow, Muzzleloader, and Shotgun zone-specific permits are now for the harvest of antlerless deer only. If a hunter wishes to pursue and harvest an antlered deer during any of these permit seasons, they must purchase an additional Bonus Bow, Bonus Muzzleloader, or Bonus Shotgun permit (cost $28). Hunters may only purchase a Bonus Shotgun permit for an antlered deer if they did not harvest two antlered deer during the Six-day Firearm season. These Bonus permits are not zone specific and can be used in any zone for which the hunter already has an antlerless zone permit. The Bonus permit may NOT be used in a zone in which the hunter does not already possess an antlerless zone permit. Hunters may only purchase one Bonus permit per season. 5 - Special Areas Information A new special area zone is added (Zone 68) in Woodland Township, Burlington County for the Franklin Parker Preserve, a property co-owned and managed by the NJ Conservation Foundation and the NJ Div. of Parks and Forestry. The Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge's Zone 58 is split into two separate zones. The existing Zone 58, north of Route 72 will keep its designation; south of Route 72 is now Zone 70. Zone 57's season structure is changed. Monmouth Battlefield State Park (Zone 64) adds the Six-day Firearm and Winter Bow seasons; the Permit Shotgun season is moved to coincide with the Six-day season. Supawna Meadows National Wildlife Refuge (Zone 59) is incorporated into the surrounding Zone 63; Supawna Meadows will be open only during all bow seasons and is closed to firearm deer hunting. Lakehurst Naval Engineering Station (Zone 53), and Earle Naval Weapons Station (Zone 40), have season format changes.
Some files on this site require adobe acrobat pdf reader to view. download the free pdf reader division of fish & wildlife: home | links | contact f&w department: njdep home | about dep | index by topic | programs/units | dep online statewide: njhome | citizen | business | government | services A to Z | departments | search Copyright © State of New Jersey, 1996-2007 Department of Environmental Protection P. O. Box 402 Trenton, NJ 08625-0402
Last Updated: May 17, 2007
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Posted 8/17/07
NJ 2007-2008 Deer Regulation Sets
REGULATION SET # 1: ZONE -4 .. Legal hunting hours: ½ hour before sunrise to ½ hour after sunset. .. No deer hunting on Sundays.
.. Note: Only one antlerless permit, per zone, may be purchased in each permit season. If a hunter purchases an antlerless permit for more than one zone in a season, the bonus buck permit is valid for a ONE TIME USE in only ONE of the corresponding zones for that season. Properly licensed hunters are still limited to ONE antlered buck per season, regardless of the number of antlerless permits purchased.
Fall Bow (24-days): September 29 - October 26, 2007 Season bag limit is two deer - only ONE may be antlered. Permit Bow (25-days): October 27 - November 24, 2007 Season bag limit is two deer. ONE may be antlered if the bonus buck bow permit is purchased. However, if the hunter chooses not to purchase the bonus buck bow permit then the bag limit is two antlerless deer only. (See note above). Youth Day - Bow (1-day): September 22, 2007 Youth Day - Firearm (1-day): November 17, 2007 Season bag limit is one deer of either sex for qualified youth hunters only. Any deer harvested by a qualified youth hunter accompanied by a similar licensed, non-shooting adult mentor is NOT included as part of the bag limit for the Fall Bow or Six-day Firearm season. Permit Muzzleloader (12-days): November 26, 27 and December 10, 11, 15 - 24, 2007 Season bag limit is two deer. ONE may be antlered if the bonus buck muzzleloader permit is purchased. However, if the hunter chooses not to purchase the bonus buck muzzleloader permit then the bag limit is two antlerless deer only. (See note above). Six-day Firearm (6-days): December 3 - 8, 2007 Season bag limit is two antlered deer. However, If a hunter harvests two antlered deer, he/she forfeits the opportunity to harvest an antlered deer during the Permit Shotgun Season. Only one buck may be taken at a time. Permit Shotgun Season (1-day): December 12, 2007 Season bag limit is one deer. It may be antlered if the bonus buck shotgun permit is purchased. However, if the hunter chooses not to purchase the bonus buck shotgun permit, or harvested two antlered deer during the Six-day Firearm season, then the bag limit is one antlerless deer only. (See note above). Winter Bow (27-days): January 1 - 31, 2008 Season bag limit is two deer - only ONE may be antlered.
REGULATION SET # 2: ZONES - 1, 3*, 21, 23, 24, 43, 45, 46
* Any antlered deer taken in Zone 3 must have at least three antler points on one side of the rack. .. Legal hunting hours: ½ hour before sunrise to ½ hour after sunset. .. No deer hunting on Sundays. .. Note: Only one antlerless permit, per zone, may be purchased in each permit season. If a hunter purchases an antlerless permit for more than one zone in
season, the bonus buck permit is valid for a ONE TIME USE in only ONE of the corresponding zones for that season. Properly licensed hunters are still limited to ONE antlered buck per season, regardless of the number of antlerless permits purchased.
Fall Bow (24-days): September 29 - October 26, 2007 Season bag limit is two deer - only ONE may be antlered. Permit Bow (25-days): October 27 - November 24, 2007 Season bag limit is two deer. ONE may be antlered if the bonus buck bow permit is purchased. However, if the hunter chooses not to purchase the bonus buck bow permit then the bag limit is two antlerless deer only. (See note above). Youth Day - Bow (1-day): September 22, 2007 Youth Day - Firearm (1-day): November 17, 2007 Season bag limit is one deer of either sex for qualified youth hunters only. Any deer harvested by a qualified youth hunter accompanied by a similar licensed, non-shooting adult mentor is NOT included as part of the bag limit for the Fall Bow or Six-day Firearm season. Permit Muzzleloader (21-days): November 26, 27; December 10, 11, 15 - 24, 26 - 31, 2007; and January 1 - 4, 2008 Season bag limit is two deer. ONE may be antlered if the bonus buck muzzleloader permit is purchased. However, if the hunter chooses not to purchase the bonus buck muzzleloader permit, then the bag limit is two antlerless deer only. (See note above). Six-day Firearm (6-days): December 3 - 8, 2007 Season bag limit is two antlered deer. However, If a hunter harvests two antlered deer, he/she forfeits the opportunity to harvest an antlered deer during the Permit Shotgun Season. Only one buck may be taken at a time. Permit Shotgun Season (1-day): December 12, 2007 Season bag limit is one deer. It may be antlered if the bonus buck shotgun permit is purchased. However, if the hunter chooses not to purchase the bonus buck shotgun permit or harvested two antlered deer during the Six-day firearm season, then the bag limit is one antlerless deer only. (See note above). Winter Bow (27-days): January 1 - 31, 2008 Season bag limit is two deer - only ONE may be antlered.
REGULATION SET # 3: ZONES - 6, 18, 30, 34, 55, 65 5 .. Legal hunting hours: ½ hour before sunrise to ½ hour after sunset. .. No deer hunting on Sundays. .. Note: Only one antlerless permit, per zone, may be purchased in each permit season. If a hunter purchases an antlerless permit for more than one zone in
a season, the bonus buck permit is valid for a ONE TIME USE in only ONE of the corresponding zones for that season. Properly licensed hunters are still limited to ONE antlered buck per season, regardless of the number of antlerless permits purchased.
Fall Bow (24-days): September 29 - October 26, 2007 Season bag limit is two deer - only ONE may be antlered. Permit Bow (25-days): October 27 - November 24, 2007 Season bag limit is two deer. ONE may be antlered if the bonus buck bow permit is purchased. However, if the hunter chooses not to purchase the bonus buck bow permit then the bag limit is two antlerless deer only. (See note above). Youth Day - Bow (1-day): September 22, 2007 Youth Day - Firearm (1-day): November 17, 2007 Season bag limit is one deer of either sex for qualified youth hunters only. Any deer harvested by a qualified youth hunter accompanied by a similar licensed, non-shooting adult mentor is NOT included as part of the bag limit for the Fall Bow or Six-day Firearm season. Permit Muzzleloader (21-days): November 26, 27; December 10, 11, 15 - 24, 26 - 31, 2007; and January 1 - 4, 2008 Season bag limit is two deer. ONE may be antlered if the bonus buck muzzleloader permit is purchased. However, if the hunter chooses not to purchase the bonus buck muzzleloader permit, then the bag limit is two antlerless deer only. (See note above). Six-day Firearm (6-days): December 3 - 8, 2007 Season bag limit is two antlered deer. However, If a hunter harvests two antlered deer, he/she forfeits the opportunity to harvest an antlered deer during the Permit Shotgun Season. Only one buck may be taken at a time. Permit Shotgun Season (3-days): December 12 - 14 2007 Season bag limit is two deer. ONE may be antlered if the bonus buck shotgun permit is purchased. However, if the hunter chooses not to purchase the bonus buck shotgun permit or harvested two antlered deer during the Six-day firearm season, then the bag limit is two antlerless deer only. (See note above). Winter Bow (27-days): January 1 - 31, 2008 Season bag limit is two deer - only ONE may be antlered.
REGULATION SET # 4: ZONES - 2, 16, 22, 26, 27*, 28, 29*, 31, 35*, 47, 63*
* Any antlered deer taken in Zone 27, 29, 35 or 63 must have at least three antler points on one side of the rack. .. Legal hunting hours: ½ hour before sunrise to ½ hour after sunset. .. No deer hunting on Sundays. .. Note: Only one antlerless permit, per zone, may be purchased in each permit season. If a hunter purchases an antlerless permit for more than one zone in
season, the bonus buck permit is valid for a ONE TIME USE in only ONE of the corresponding zones for that season. Properly licensed hunters are still limited to ONE antlered buck per season, regardless of the number of antlerless permits purchased.
Fall Bow (42-days): First deer must be antlerless: September 8 - 28, 2007 First deer may be antlered or antlerless: September 29 - October 26, 2007 Season bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer and ONE antlered deer. Permit Bow (55-days): October 27 - December 24, 26 - 31, 2007 Season bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer. ONE antlered deer may be harvested if the bonus buck bow permit is purchased. (See note above). Youth Day - Bow (1-day): September 22, 2007 Youth Day - Firearm (1-day): November 17, 2007 Season bag limit is one deer of either sex for any qualified youth hunter only. Any deer harvested by a qualified youth hunter accompanied by a similar licensed, non-shooting adult mentor is NOT included as part of the bag limit for the Fall Bow or Six-day Firearm season. Permit Muzzleloader (21-days): November 26, 27; December 10, 11, 15 - 24, 26 - 31, 2007; and January 1 - 4, 2008 Season bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer. ONE antlered deer may be harvested if the bonus buck muzzleloader permit is purchased. However, if the hunter chooses not to purchase the bonus buck muzzleloader permit , then the bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer only. (See note above). Six-day Firearm (6-days): December 3 - 8, 2007 Season bag limit is two antlered deer. However, If a hunter harvests two antlered deer, he/she forfeits the opportunity to harvest an antlered deer during the Permit Shotgun Season. Only one buck may be taken at a time. Permit Shotgun Season (10-days): December 12 - 14, 2007; and January 5 - 12, 2008 Season bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer. ONE antlered deer may be harvested if the bonus buck shotgun permit is purchased. However, if the hunter harvests two antlered deer during the Six-day firearm season, then the bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer only. (See note above). Winter Bow (27-days): January 1 - 31, 2008 Season bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer and ONE antlered deer.
REGULATION SET # 6: ZONES - 5, 17, 19, 25, 42, 48 REGULATION SET # 6: ZONES - 5, 17, 19, 25, 42, 48 .. Legal hunting hours: ½ hour before sunrise to ½ hour after sunset. .. No deer hunting on Sundays. .. Note: Only one antlerless permit, per zone, may be purchased in each permit season. If a hunter purchases an antlerless permit for more than one zone
in a season, the bonus buck permit is valid for a ONE TIME USE in only ONE of the corresponding zones for that season. Properly licensed hunters are still limited to ONE antlered buck per season, regardless of the number of antlerless permits purchased.
Fall Bow (42-days): First deer must be antlerless: September 8 - 28, 2007 First deer may be antlered or antlerless: September 29 - October 26, 2007 Season bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer and ONE antlered deer. Permit Bow (55-days): October 27 - December 24, 26 - 31, 2007 Season bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer. ONE antlered deer may be harvested if the bonus buck bow permit is purchased. (See note above). Youth Day - Bow (1-day): September 22, 2007 Youth Day - Firearm (1-day): November 17, 2007 Season bag limit is one deer of either sex for any qualified youth hunter only. Any deer harvested by a qualified youth hunter accompanied by a similar licensed, non-shooting adult mentor is NOT included as part of the bag limit for the Fall Bow or Six-day Firearm season. Permit Muzzleloader (50-days): Antlerless deer only: December 3 - 8, 2007 Antlered or Antlerless: November 26, 27; December 10, 11, 15 - 24, 26 - 31, 2007; and January 1 - 31, 2008 Season bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer. ONE antlered deer may be harvested if the bonus buck muzzleloader permit is purchased. However, if the hunterchooses not to purchase the bonus buck muzzleloader permit , then the bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer only. Two deer may be taken at a time. (See note above). Six-day Firearm (6-days): December 3 - 8, 2007 Season bag limit is two antlered deer. However, If a hunter harvests two antlered deer, he/she forfeits the opportunity to harvest an antlered deer during the Permit Shotgun Season. Only one buck may be taken at a time. Permit Shotgun Season (32-days): Antlerless deer only:December 3 - 8, 2007 Antlered or Antlerless: December 12 - 14, 2007; and January 5 - 31, 2008 Season bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer. ONE antlered deer may be harvested if the bonus buck shotgun permit is purchased. However, if the hunter harvests two antlered deer during the Six-day firearm season, then the bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer only. Two deer may be taken at a time. (See note above). Winter Bow (27-days): January 1 - 31, 2008 Season bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer and ONE antlered deer.
REGULATION SET # 8: ZONES - 7, 8, 9*, 10, 11, 12, 13*, 14, 15, 36, 41, 49, 50, 51
* Any antlered deer taken in Zones 9 or 13 must have at least three antler points on one side of the rack. .. Legal hunting hours: ½ hour before sunrise to ½ hour after sunset. .. No deer hunting on Sundays.
.. Note: Only one antlerless permit, per zone, may be purchased in each permit season. If a hunter purchases an antlerless permit for more than one zone in a season, the bonus buck permit is valid for a ONE TIME USE in only ONE of the corresponding zones for that season. Properly licensed hunters are still limited to ONE antlered buck per season, regardless of the number of antlerless permits purchased.
Fall Bow (42-days): First deer must be antlerless: September 8 - 28, 2007 First deer may be antlered or antlerless: September 29 - October 26, 2007 Season bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer and ONE antlered deer. Permit Bow (55-days): October 27 - December 24, 26 - 31, 2007 Season bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer. ONE antlered deer may be harvested if the bonus buck bow permit is purchased. (See note above). Youth Day - Bow (1-day): September 22, 2007 Youth Day - Firearm (1-day): November 17, 2007 Season bag limit is one deer of either sex for any qualified youth hunter only. Any deer harvested by a qualified youth hunter accompanied by a similar licensed, non-shooting adult mentor is NOT included as part of the bag limit for the Fall Bow or Six-day Firearm season. Permit Muzzleloader (61-days): Antlerless deer only: November 28 - 30 and December 3 - 8, 2007 Antlered or Antlerless: November 26, 27; December 10, 11, 15 - 24, 26 - 31, 2007; and January 1 - February 9, 2008 Season bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer. ONE antlered deer may be harvested if the bonus buck muzzleloader permit is purchased. However, if the hunter chooses not to purchase the bonus buck muzzleloader permit , then the bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer only. Two deer may be taken at a time. (See note above). Six-day Firearm (6-days): December 3 - 8, 2007 Season bag limit is two antlered deer. However, If a hunter harvests two antlered deer, he/she forfeits the opportunity to harvest an antlered deer during the Permit Shotgun Season. Only one buck may be taken at a time. Permit Shotgun Season (43-days): Antlerless deer only: November 28 - 30 and December 3 - 8, 2007 Antlered or Antlerless: December 12 - 14, 2007; and January 5 - February 9, 2008 Season bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer. ONE antlered deer may be harvested if the bonus buck shotgun permit is purchased. However, if the hunter harvests two antlered deer during the Six-day firearm season, then the bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer only. Two deer may be taken at a time. (See note above). Winter Bow (41-days): January 1 - Feb. 16, 2008 Season bag limit is unlimited antlerless deer and ONE antlered deer.
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Sent: Monday, August 06, 2007 8:06 AM Subject: New Jersey State Police Seeking to Enact Further Firearms Restrictions by Regulation
New Jersey State Police Seeking to Enact Further Firearms Restrictions by Regulation Please Mail Your Comments in Today! The New Jersey State Police recently issued new rule proposals for the regulation of firearms, magazines, and retailers in the Garden State. If approved, these regulations will have the rule of law without ever being debated by our legislators in Trenton, turning thousands of unsuspecting citizens into felons! The proposal would do the following: It would require law-abiding gun owners to surrender or pay to render their "large capacity" magazines permanently blocked. Possession of a temporarily blocked "large capacity" magazine would be a crime. Certain semi-automatic shotguns and handguns would be classified as "assault firearms" because of cosmetic features, which have not been named in any statute enacted by the New Jersey Legislature. Another proposal seeks to harass lawful owners and retailers of "assault firearms" by requiring that licensed dealers who accept an "assault firearm" and/or machine gun from a citizen for transfer, resale, or repair must notify the Superintendent of the State Police within 48 hours. Also, all firearms sold by retailers would be mandated to be secured by steel cable. Finally, the proposal forces those placing handguns on consignment to produce a new permit to retake possession of the handgun. Law-abiding firearm owners have until Friday, August 17 to voice their opposition to the new rules and the Superintendent needs to hear from you today! Public comments will only be accepted by mail. STAND UP AND MAKE YOUR VOICE HEARD! PLEASE MAIL YOUR COMMENTS IN TODAY!
Please cut and paste the below letter onto a new page, date, sign, and mail to the listed address: Date: Colonel Joseph R. Fuentes, Superintendent New Jersey State Police PO Box 7068 West Trenton, New Jersey 08638 Attn: Firearms Investigation Unit Re: Comments to PRN 2007-199 Dear Colonel Fuentes: As a law-abiding New Jersey firearm owner, I respectfully object to, and urge you to not to implement certain proposed changes to the New Jersey Administrative Code set forth in your Rule Proposal dated June 18, 2007. These proposed changes would unilaterally turn thousands of honest citizens into criminals. Furthermore, it would impose this legal jeopardy in the complete absence of legislative intent, debate, and open discussion.
For many years, numerous state authorities have issued formal written advice to law abiding citizens, licensed firearm dealers, and police officers around the state permitting temporary blocking of magazines. Thousands of people have relied upon that advice by purchasing, possessing, transferring, transporting, and selling temporarily blocked magazines. These people would be forced to either surrender their private property with no compensation or pay to render their magazines permanently blocked. Rule proposal 13:54-1.2 will make thousands of unsuspecting, law-abiding firearm owners who are unaware of this dramatic reversal into felons by classifying a temporarily blocked magazine as a "large capacity magazine. Also, under 13:54-1.2, certain semi-automatic shotguns, the most "commonly used firearm" by New Jersey sportsmen and semi-automatic pistols with common features, would be classified as "assault firearms" even though some of the supposedly undesirable shotgun features are particularly helpful to disabled shooters. Many of the supposedly undesirable features listed have not been identified in any statute passed by the New Jersey Legislature and are tantamount to new legislation even though legislating is beyond the scope of the executive branch. Rule proposal 13:54-5.1 Section (c) assumes illegal activity without probable cause upon the firearm owner and forces the retailer to delay sometimes needed repair by mandating that licensed dealers who accept an "assault firearm" and/or machine gun from a citizen for transfer, resale, or repair notify the Superintendent within 48 hours. Delaying repairs pending approval by the Superintendent of Police will only add to greater expense and unjustified inconvenience for the firearm owner and lost business for the retailer. New Jersey already mandates some of the toughest security measures for firearm retailers in the country. Additions to rule 13:54-6.5 would impose significant financial impacts upon retail firearm dealers by requiring dealers whose firearms are on display to secure firearms by a steel cable. Cabled firearms are more likely to "dry-fire" as the cable rests on the triggers of the firearms. Dry-firing can be particularly harmful to shotguns and antique firearms causing damage to the firing pins and actions of the firearms. Securing firearms by steel cables could also result in deep scrapes and permanent damage of those firearms and force retailers to sell the items for significantly less than the suggested retail value. Rule proposal 13:54-3.20 forces those who place firearms on consignment to produce a new permit to purchase a handgun even though they may have dropped off the firearm as early as one day previously. This will place a new unnecessary burden on licensing authorities to reissue permits. This proposed regulation could redirect what is currently a safe and legal commerce to the black market. Again, I respectfully object to these proposals and urge you not to implement them. Sincerely, Address:
www.NRAILA.org Write Your Representative Write The Media Get Involved Locally Register To Vote Contribute Please do not reply to this email as you will not receive a response. This email is a broadcast email generated by an automated system. To contact NRA-ILA call 800-392-8683. Address: 11250 Waples Mill Road Fairfax, Virginia 22030
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F&G isn't sending out rifle permit renewals anymore. The permits expired on 6/30/07, so if you want to muzzleloader hunt you'll need to purchase a new permit online or at a license agent. Price: $10.50
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Date:Mon, 09 Jul 2007 05:30:58 -0700 (PDT) Mobile Alert Subject: Fwd: [Nj_federation_alert] A3275 Position Statement Date:Sat, 07 Jul 2007 08:14:39 -0400 Subject:[Nj_federation_alert] A3275 Position Statement To:nj_federation_alert@njsfsc.org
A3275 – changes the composition and revises the authority of the Fish & Game Council. Sponsors – Asym. Michael J. Panter – (D) District #12 / Asyw. Linda R. Greenstein (D) #14 The New Jersey State Federation of Sportsmen’s Clubs (NJSFSC) is opposed to this animal-rights supported bill, which would totally politicize the composition of the Fish & Game Council and change they way New Jersey Wildlife has been successfully managed for the past 100 years. With the enactment of this legislation the Fish & Game Council would become a mere political entity totally controlled by the Governor and the administration in power. A3275 would also do away with the provisions of the State Fish Game codes which provide for the public’s use and development of New Jersey’s wildlife for recreational and food supply purposes. A3275 is a direct attack on sport hunting, sport fishing and the public’s use of wildlife by New Jersey’s anti-fishing, anti-hunting, anti-animal use zealots. If enacted it would have a disastrous impact on New Jersey’s fish and wildlife resources, and particularly on the millions of New Jersey citizens who presently value the resource and its use for recreational, economic, and esthetic benefits. The New Jersey State Federation of Sportsmen’s Clubs requests a “NO” vote on A3275.
Respectfully submitted George P. Howard, Conservation Director NJSFSC 6/14/07
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Subject:History of the NRA by John G. Mitchell “GOD GUNS & GUTS MADE AMERICA FREE”
The National Rifle Association and the Right to Bear Arms
Among the most common mechanical possessions in the households of America, outnumbering even the motor vehicle and possibly outnumbered itself only by the flush toilet and the television set, is a device which, having won the West and championed liberty over the years, some householders would now proscribe as the instrument of our collective undoing. In short, the gun. I mean rifles, shotguns, pistols, and revolvers, at least 150,000,000 of them tucked away in bureau drawers and attic cupboards or racked splendidly above mantel-pieces. There are big ones and little ones; Krags and Enfields, Springfields and Mausers, Mannlicher-Carcanos and M-1 Garands, Remingtons and Winchesters and Brownings and Berettas and Rugers and Lugers and Colts; guns for all seasons and reasons; guns to punch holes in targets and tin cans, coots and Kodiak bears; guns for their own sake, guns never used; guns as last line of defense against burglars and rapists, looters and lunatics; guns to be stolen by burglars and lunatics; guns for irate lovers, quiet patriots, raving assassins, earnest sportsmen, feisty poachers, gentle collectors; guns for the people who passionately believe that the U.S. Constitution gives them a personal right to keep and bear arms. A number of institutions operate in behalf of the gun owners of America. These include the arms industry, the hook-and-bullet press, hunters’ groups functioning at the state level, and some half dozen national membership organizations whose involvement in the preservation of personal weaponry is often secondary to some other interest, such as the propagation of game species in order that hunters might have something better than tin cans on which to exercise their right to bear arms. In addition, gun owners are staunchly represented on Capitol Hill, in most statehouses, and generally throughout those rural jurisdictions where sheriffs still prevail along with rocking chairs and Bull Durham tobacco. It is a diverse constituency, this gunnery. With overlapping subgroups, it embraces 16,000,000 licensed hunters, most of the nation’s farmers and ranchers, countless edgy urban shopkeepers, and, by some estimates, as many as four of every ten heads-of-household in the land. No one institution could possibly speak for every Tom, Dick, and Harriet of them. And only one tries—the National Rifle Association of America, better known as the NRA to friend and foe alike, of which there are plenty. The National Rifle Association was chartered in New York State in 1871, just over nine years after regiments of raw Union recruits were marched to the fields of Shiloh to match their marksmanship with General P.G.T. Beauregard’s finest Confederate squirrel shooters. The Northerners were armed for the most part with new, muzzle-loading Springfields. In the Union’s haste to bring the war to a speedy end, there had not been time enough to instruct the rank and file in the rifle’s proper use. As a result, some of the Springfields at Shiloh were recovered by Beauregard’s men in mint condition: dropped in the field and never fired. Similar humiliations occurred at Gettysburg and other Union shrines. After the war, commands not otherwise engaged in Southern reconstruction or Indian removal in the West promptly reverted to antebellum type, with much emphasis on close-order drill and nary a round at the rifle range. Some retired officers, however, remembered the lesson of Shiloh and began to speak of America’s need for straight shooters. These officers were the founders of the National Rifle Association. Over the past century, pursuing its charter mandate, the NRA has served with distinction as the undisputed alma mater of American marksmen. It has nurtured affiliate rifle clubs in every state, elevated competitive shooting to the level of true sport, encouraged excellence at arms in the military services, and prepared many a peacetime citizen for the difficult role of wartime rifleman. It has swelled from a modest cadre of Union veterans reminiscing in wall tents to an organizational colossus of 1,200,000 dues-paying members, 300 employees, $26,400,000 in securities, a multimillion-dollar headquarters building in Washington, D.C., 37,707 acres of New Mexican real estate, and (in 1976) an expense budget of more than $16,500,000, of which almost a quarter was spent by the NRA’s aggressive lobbying arm, the Institute for Legislative Action. The priorities of the NRA are reflected in this budget, and they are quite different from the pressing martial concerns of a century ago. For every dollar spent directly in 1976 on such placid programs as hunter safety education and competitive shooting matches, two were shelled out in the volatile arena where gun-owner “rights” and NRA goals are under constant attack by proponents of gun control. The gun controllers compose a diverse constituency themselves. They include tough big-city chiefs of police, Eastern liberals and assorted do-gooders with college degrees, most respondents to Harris surveys and Gallup polls, some psychiatrists, widows of slain cops, and the anonymous authors of august reports by the President’s Commission on Law Enforcement and the Administration of Justice, the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders, the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence, and the National Advisory Commission on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals. They also include U.S. Representative John Conyers, Jr., the Detroit Democrat who, as chairman of the House Subcommittee on Crime in the Ninety-fourth Congress, held extensive hearings across the country in hopes of gathering support for a law that would have prohibited the manufacture and sale of “substandard” handguns, the so-called Saturday Night Specials. In opening the first of those hearings in February, 1975, Chairman Conyers reflected on past frustrated efforts to enact effective legislation. The greatest obstacles, he dourly observed, were the “politically devastating lobbying activities of hunters and sportsmen, spearheaded by the National Rifle Association. … Today, there are more than 200 million Americans, 139 million of whom are of voting age. On the issue of gun control, the one million or so members of the National Rifle Association have had a staggeringly disproportionate amount of influence over the course of our federal policy.” And that influence prevailed right down to the bitter end of the Ninety-fourth Congress, at which time John Conyers’ firearms bill of 1976 was quietly buried without a floor vote in the yellow duff of election-year politics. Meanwhile, internal rumblings were heard within the corporate body of the NRA. Despite its recent tactical victory in the Congress, there were curious rumors that certain NRA executives were “going soft” on the gut issue of gun control. It was said that the NRA brass was preparing to sell out to bird watchers and bleeding hearts. And finally there was talk of a palace revolt, if need be, to oust the offenders from office at the next annual meeting. A singular image looms large within the national subconscious—a lone man with a rifle snugged in the crook of his arm, or a pistol in his fist. It is the Minuteman at Concord Bridge, Daniel Boone at Cumberland Gap, Jeremiah Johnson in the Shining Mountains, G’fcster at the Little BigHorn, Teddy Roosevelt at San Juan Hill, Alvin York in the Argonne Forest, and GI Joe on the beachhead at Anzio. The weapons change, but not the nature of the man—alone, fearless, confident, doing what has to be done in a world in which ambiguity is not allowed. And out of the past he whispers a rifleman’s verity: “God, guns, and guts made America free.” But there are other voices, darker images: Lee Harvey Oswald, Sirhan Sirhan, James Earl Ray, young Charles Whitman perched in his tower at the University of Texas with three rifles, two pistols, one shotgun, seven hundred rounds of ammunition, and fourteen perforated human bodies on the campus lawns below him. For many Americans, the enchanted vision of the solitary gunner is shrinking fast. Yet scratch the subconscious of an NRA member and the chances are you will find yourself not in Dallas or Los Angeles or Memphis but in some place more absolute between the bridge at Concord and the bulkheads at Anzio Beach. There was a time not long ago when I believed we had pretty much had it with guns. I mean, as a nation. Guns were getting a bad press in the sixties. And so were hunters. A friend who edited a hunting-and-fishing magazine said he was thinking of changing the magazine’s tone by eschewing traditional bag-limit lore, the literature of vicarious slaughter. Hunters are “going out less,” he explained, quoting the title of a piece by novelist Vance Bourjaily which my friend had commissioned but declined to publish for fear of antagonizing his advertisers. He needn’t have worried. For despite all the adverse publicity, the antigun sentiment, the legislative efforts to make owning a gun as difficult as possible—and however less often Bourjaily himself may be going out to hunt—the fact of the matter is that Americans are going out as often as they ever did in postwar times. Each year there are more of them, and more of their guns. Between 1960 and 1976, the number of licensed hunters in this country increased more than 14 per cent (to 16,300,000). This is only three points off the per cent of increase for the U.S. population as a whole during the same period. Not a bad record for the enduring Nimrod tradition, especially if one considers that, during those sixteen years, America witnessed its greatest loss of huntable land (to “Posted” signs and suburbanization). Moreover, dollar-volume sales of arms and ammunition continue to increase. Inflation accounts for much of this, but not enough to indicate any slackening in the number of units sold; not when rifle and shotgun sales of $269,700,000 in 1975 showed a 27 per cent improvement over sales in 1972, and surely not when handgun sales of $125,500,000 showed a 39 per cent gain in the same three-year period. These figures, of course, reflect only legal over-the-counter transactions. They do not include back-alley sales of Saturday Night Specials and contraband military weapons which no self-respecting urban guerrilla can afford to be without. Thus it would seem that quite a few Americans are not yet as fed up with guns as I had previously believed. Statistically, it would be impossible to construct an accurate profile of the gun owners of this country. They simply refuse to be placed into neat little squares. It does seem feasible, however, to arrive at some general categorical conclusions about them. One might divide the lawful gun owners of this country into four parts. There are (1) hunters, (2) competitive shooters, (3) collectors, and (4) defenders. By weight of numbers, competitive shooters and collectors do not count for much, nor do they particularly trouble the sensibilities of the antigunners. This leaves the hunters and the defenders. According to NRA executives, at least half their members are hunters; yet hunting, apparently, is not always the motive for a hunter to join the NRA. A member opinion survey last year, with more than 130,000 responding, showed that “the most important single reason I first joined NRA” was not “Hunting” (at 14.7 per cent, the second highest response) but “Protecting My Gun Rights” (at 47.7 per cent). Therefore, it seems that anyone who joins the NRA mainly to protect gun rights can be classified as a defender, whether he or she hunts or not. Defenders no doubt constitute the largest sector of the NRA membership and the largest of the entire gun-owning public as well. This is not to say that all defenders are equally concerned first and foremost with protecting their gun rights. Some are. But others are more concerned with protecting themselves, their spouses, their children, their homes, their businesses, their land. They see themselves as decent, law-abiding citizens. But the System has failed them. They feel helpless. On the farm, where a rifle or shotgun can be as valid and valued a tool as any other, varmints prey on crops and livestock. In the city, there is crime in the streets and fear behind every double-locked door. Some people begin & | | |