As
part of the National Hunting and Fishing Day celebrations, officials from the Pennsylvania Fish and
Boat Commission, Pennsylvania Game Commission and Governor Edward G. Rendell’s Youth Hunting, Fishing and
Conservation Council were joined by several respected statewide sportsmen’s organizations to highlight the various
benefits that Pennsylvanians receive from hunting, trapping and fishing.
“It has been said many times that sportsmen
and sportswomen were America’s first conservationists,” said Carl G. Roe, Game Commission executive director. “It
was the hunters, trappers and anglers who were the first to raise their voices about the need
for conservation.”
Roe
noted that, in the late 1800s, hunters, trappers and anglers were the ones who first decried
the losses afield from the commercialization of wildlife and the destruction of wildlife habitat.
“Sportsmen
were some of the first Americans to recognize the toll of pollution on fish and wildlife, and
the need to preserve our wild spaces,” Roe
said. “Names like Roosevelt, Hornaday, Leopold and Audubon, were hunters first before they became names that
are revered today.
“And, even to this day, hunters, trappers and anglers continue to almost solely fund fish
and wildlife conservation in Pennsylvania, as well as managing Pennsylvania’s wildlife through hunting and trapping.
There is no question that sportsmen and sportswomen play a vital role in supporting the state
economy, as well as the economic well-being of many rural areas of the Commonwealth.”
Roe noted that, according
to a 1998 Center for Rural Pennsylvania study, hunting, trapping and fishing have a $9.6 billion
annual economic impact on the state and support some 88,000 jobs.
Dr. Douglas Austen, Pennsylvania
Fish and Boat Commission executive director, said that Pennsylvania also has played an historical
role in the development of fishing.
“Pennsylvania
has been the birthplace of many fishing firsts,” Dr. Austen said. “The country’s first fishing
club was formed in Philadelphia in 1732, the nation’s first fishing magazine and first fishing book were published
here and, throughout history, the Keystone state has been home to many important angling innovators
who popularized the sport across the country.
“Today,
Pennsylvania remains a top fishing destination for anglers who travel here to sample our famous
trout streams and world-class bass fisheries.”
Each year, nearly two million people, including about 500,000
children, go fishing in Pennsylvania. Residents and visitors combine to take some 18 million
fishing trips in the Commonwealth annually. But, anglers aren’t
the only ones making a prize catch; fishing is a real trophy for Pennsylvania’s economy.
Austen noted that several
studies have documented the economic contributions from sportfishing in Pennsylvania. The U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service and the American Sportfishing Association estimate fishing and fishing-related
activities generate more than $1.6 billion for Pennsylvania’s economy each year. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania
projects the positive economic impact at $4.7 billion annually.
“Sportfishing in Pennsylvania supports 14,000
jobs and generates $53 million in annual revenue for the state’s general fund through sales and income taxes,”
Austen
said. Roe and Austen pointed out that, in 1970, the first to suggest an official day of thanks
to sportsmen was Ira Joffe, owner of Joffe’s
Gun Shop in Upper Darby, Delaware County. Then Gov. Raymond Shafer adopted Joffe’s idea and created “Outdoor
Sportsman’s Day” in the state.
With determined prompting from various sportsmen, the concept soon emerged
on the national level when, in early 1972, Congress unanimously passed legislation authorizing
a National Hunting and Fishing Day. On May 2, 1972, President Richard Nixon signed the first
proclamation of National Hunting and Fishing Day, and soon after, all 50 governors and more than
600 mayors had joined in by proclaiming state and local versions of National Hunting and Fishing
Day.
Founded in 1866, the Pennsylvania Fish & Boat Commission
(PFBC) is one of the oldest and most effective conservation agencies in the nation. The Commission
is an independent state government agency with responsibilities for protecting and managing Pennsylvania’s fishery
resources and regulating recreational fishing and boating on Pennsylvania waters. The PFBC’s mission is “To
provide fishing and boating opportunities through the protection and management of aquatic resources.”
The
funds to accomplish this mission come primarily through the sale of fishing licenses and boat
registrations. No General Fund tax dollars are used in the operations of the PFBC.
Created in
1895 as an independent state agency, the Game Commission is responsible for conserving and managing
all wild birds and mammals in the Commonwealth, establishing hunting seasons and bag limits,
enforcing hunting and trapping laws, and managing habitat on the 1.4 million acres of State Game
Lands it has purchased over the years with hunting and furtaking license dollars to safeguard
wildlife habitat. The agency also conducts numerous wildlife conservation programs for schools,
civic organizations and sportsmen’s
clubs.
The Game Commission does not receive any general state taxpayer dollars for its annual
operating budget. The agency is funded by license sales revenues; the state’s share of the federal Pittman-Robertson
program, which is an excise tax collected through the sale of sporting arms and ammunition; and
monies from the sale of oil, gas, coal, timber and minerals derived from State Game Lands. |