Sunday Territorian

We’re still in hunt for some real attention

- BART IRWIN NT Field and Game

THE final election result is in and the obvious outcome is shooting and hunting is now politicise­d, probably forever.

In late 2019 many hunting and shooting groups funded and distribute­d the I HUNT, I SHOOT, I VOTE stickers. This was a revamp of a sticker campaign Field and Game Australia ran in the late 2000s.

It was time to let all parties know hunters and shooters are out there, just like fishermen did in the late 1990s with the I FISH, I VOTE campaign.

The fishing bumper sticker was everywhere and the I HUNT, I SHOOT, I VOTE sticker took off just as successful­ly with the 7000-print run now nearly exhausted.

Since the first ones were seen there was a softening of rhetoric towards hunting and shooting by the government. The two-day training program to get a shooter’s licence was pigeonhole­d. Hopefully gone for good. With a lot of work by the NT Firearms Council the Savage A22R ban was revoked and made legal again.

The Country Liberal Party created the first hunting policy ever for the NT and Minister Lawler announced she was looking for a new hunting reserve in a “me too” response.

The ALP would be wise to implement the CLP hunting policy. That is what hunters of the NT expected in the next term. The Territory has always attracted hunters and shooters.

It is time we showed the parliament we are worthy of the same attention fishers receive given our 20,000-plus participan­ts in the NT.

If you consider Victoria has over 180 state game reserves in an area the size of a postage stamp compared to the NT and we have four, it is not hard to see we are being dudded.

If you note that fishermen got $50m pledged to be spent on infrastruc­ture in the last term of government, you can see that hunters and shooters have been overlooked for too long.

It is now time to do another print run and remind government we aren’t going away, but in fact activating.

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