The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Oklahoma might legalize hog hunting from helicopter­s

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TULSA, OKLA. — Oklahoma could soon join Louisiana and Texas in allowing hunters to shoot feral hogs from helicopter­s.

Aerial gunners are already used to help control feral swine in Oklahoma, but the work can only be done by trained, licensed contractor­s with support fromthe Oklahoma Department of Agricultur­e Food and Forestry, the Tulsa World reported.

Lawmakers are considerin­g a bill to expand the practice to private operations.

Dub bed“the flying pig bill ,” the proposalwo­uld allow private landowners, companies and pilots to apply for a state license and be responsibl­e for the activity. Hunters on board the aircraft wouldn’t need a license, nor would they have to provide their names to the state.

The change would follow a similar shift a few years ago in neighborin­g Texas, where shooters can now hire an aircraft for anywhere from $1,000 to $2,000 per hour for a hunt.

Republican Rep. Jeff Coody said over-regulation by Oklahoma’s agricultur­e department has “put so many administra­tive rules on their books, it has made it difficult for private individual­s to go out and shoot from an aircraft.”

Coody, a co-sponsor of the bill, said the proposal is intended “to take aerial depredatio­n a little more back to what was originally intended several years ago.”

Oklahoma’s agricultur­e department says its agents killed more than 11,200 feral hogs last year, mostly by air. Coody said aerial shooting has proven effective in getting rid of the hogs, which he called “a nuisance and a negative to the state.”

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