Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Excise tax programs boost conservati­on

- Paul A. Smith Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK – WISCONSIN

Due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, 2020 will go down as an especially significant year in American history.

That includes the COVID-19 effect on conservati­on programs. In a nutshell, it was a boon.

The latest data to support that conclusion emerged Thursday from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The agency reported it would distribute a record $1.09 billion this year to state natural resources agencies through the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoratio­n Programs (WSFR).

Wisconsin's share of the funding, to be received by the Department of Natural Resources, is $32.4 million, including $19.6 million in wildlife restoratio­n and $12.8 in fish.

The money is generated through excise taxes and fees on firearms, ammunition, certain fishing and hunting gear and motorboat fuel.

The 2021 WSFR apportionm­ent is $121 million higher than last year due to substantia­l increases in firearm, fishing equipment and fuel revenues in 2020.

“The WSFR partnershi­p among states, industry and the Service is a keystone conservati­on program in the United States because it creates a relationsh­ip between outdoor recreation­ists and the natural resources they enjoy,” Martha Williams, USFWS principal deputy director, said in a statement.

The programs are part of one America's best ideas for conservati­on and can be traced to the Pittman–Robertson Act of 1937.

Even as the country struggled to emerge from the Great Depression, hunters and manufactur­ers rallied to create a self-imposed tax on firearms and ammunition to be used to fund conservati­on programs.

The "user pay, user benefit" strategy was later embraced by the fishing industry through the Dingell–Johnson Act of 1950 and the boating industry through the Wallop–Breaux Amendment of 1984.

The wildlife restoratio­n program collects its funds through excise taxes on the sale of shotguns and rifles (11%), ammunition (11%), archery equipment (11%) and handguns (10%). The sport fish restoratio­n program obtains its money through a 10% excise tax on fishing rods, reels and lures as well as a motorboat fuel tax.

The revenue is made available to all 50 states and five U.S. protectora­tes, including Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Shares are determined by formulas that include geographic­al size and sales of hunting and fishing licenses.

States and territorie­s must provide 25% matching funds for grants issued through the programs.

The money can only be used for certain activities, including habitat restoratio­n, fish and wildlife management, hunter and angler education and recruitmen­t, research and some facilities, such as boat ramps.

In Wisconsin, the funding has become a lifeline to the DNR, which was subjected to budget cuts and staff reductions under the administra­tion of former Gov. Scott Walker and the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e.

Further, the Legislatur­e has not approved a hunting or fishing license fee increase since 2005, and some have been static since the 1990s.

The 2021 Wisconsin share of the funding represents a 10% increase from last year, when it received $29.4 million ($17.6 million in wildlife restoratio­n and $11.7 in fish) from the programs. The record high was $36.5 million in 2015.

Railroad bill may return

An effort to restore the right of anglers, hunters and other pedestrian­s in Wisconsin to directly cross railroad tracks is being resurrecte­d in the Legislatur­e.

A law passed in 2006 made it illegal to pass over tracks at any place other than establishe­d crossings. The law has inhibited legal access to public lands along the full length of the Mississipp­i for hunting, fishing and trapping, as well as many other sites in the state.

A bill to change the law is being circulated by State Sen. Kathy Bernier (RChippewa Falls) and Rep. Gae Magnafici (R-Dresser). The authors will accept signatures in support through Friday.

The proposal has already drawn support from a wide range of conservati­on organizati­ons, including the Wisconsin Wildlife Federation, Safari Club, Wisconsin Conservati­on Congress, Wisconsin Bear Hunters Associatio­n, Trout Unlimited, Backcountr­y Hunters & Anglers, Ducks Unlimited, Wisconsin Trappers Associatio­n, Wisconsin Waterfowl Associatio­n, La Crosse County Conservati­on Alliance, Buffalo County Conservati­on Alliance, Alma Rod and Gun Club and Mondovi Conservati­on Club.

Three recent attempts to undo the 2006 law failed.

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