The News-Times (Sunday)

Arbitrary changes coming to federal duck stamp

- ROBERT MILLER Contact Robert Miller at earthmatte­rsrgm@gmail.com

A federal duck stamp costs $25. Waterfowl hunters have to buy them every year and fix them to their licenses. But millions of other people buy them as well — lovers of wetlands, lovers of birds. People can use them as an entry pass to any of the nation’s wildlife reserves.

Philatelis­ts with a fancy for stamps with beautiful pictures of waterfowl collect them. Artists vie every year to have their paintings chosen to be on one.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has been issuing duck stamps since 1934 and the program has been hugely successful. It has raised over $1 billion that’s been used to conserve about 6 million acres of waterfowl habitat. Nationally, 300 national wildlife refuges have been created or expanded with duck stamp money.

So naturally, the Trump administra­tion, which has, willy-nilly despoiled environmen­tal programs across the boards in its three years, has stuck its thick fingers and thoughtles­sness into it.

By executive order this spring, President Donald J. Trump and Secretary of the Interior David Bernhardt changed the stamps. From now on, or until the end of the Trump administra­tion, the stamps can’t just be of ducks, which is what they largely have been.

Starting with the designs this year and the stamps issued in 2021 the stamps “must depict an appropriat­e waterfowl hunting scene or include a hunting-related element.”

In other words, there will be ducks, but there also will be people with guns.

Ducks Unlimited, the national organizati­on dedicated to both waterfowl hunting and habitat conservati­on, is on board with this change.

But area conservati­onist and ecologists have been left wondering why it had to be made at all.

“If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” said Patrick Comins, executive director of the Connecticu­t Audubon Society.

“With all the other issues out there, why pick this one?” said Robert LaFrance, policy director Audubon Connecticu­t, the state chapter of the National Audubon Society.

Jenny Dickson, director of the wildlife division of the state Department of Environmen­tal Protection said the staff there is disappoint­ed with the change.

“It changes the ability of an artist to paint the scene,” Dickson said. “People have collected these stamps as beautiful artifacts of ducks.”

“It’s just one more example of the horrendous activities of the Trump administra­tion,” said Ben Oko, of Ridgefield, an avid birder who led the town’s Conservati­on Commission for years.

The duck stamps program had its roots in the early decades of the 20th centiry when developmen­t across the country — along coastlines and in the prairie pothole country of the northern Great Plains — ate up wetlands, destroying the habitat waterfowl need.

Earlier legislatio­n had called for preserving wetlands, but hadn’t provided any money to do the job. Jay Norwood ‘Ding’ Darling, a Pulitzer-prize winning cartoonist, sportsman and wildlife conservati­onist, had the idea of the duck stamp.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Migratory Bird Hunting Stamp Act (now the Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservati­on Act) in 1934, and Darling designed the first stamp.

The program has been so successful that individual states, including Connecticu­t, have started their own duck stamp programs.

This year, the DEEP announced from this year forward, state winners will be chosen from participan­ts in the Junior Duck Stamps program consisting of students in kindergart­en to 12th grade. In the past, profession­al artists from outside the state could submit paintings.

“It’s the perfect time to get them involved in conservati­on,” Dickson said. “They are our future conservati­onists.”

One of the reasons the duck stamp programs have succeeded has been that they brought together all the parties involved in wildlife conservati­on: Hunters, birders, lovers of natural beauty, lovers of painting of birds.

The Trump administra­tion’s change in the program has the potential to alter that coalition. It creates another wedge issue.

LaFrance pointed out this has never been a problem. Right now, hunters and environmen­talists support the Great American Outdoors Act, which will allocate as much as $1.9 billion annually for long-overdue maintenanc­e of the country’s national parks.

Likewise they are supporting the Recovering America’s Wildlife Act, which allocates $1.4 billion a year to the states for wildlife conservati­on projects,

Both bills are moving through Congress. The Senate has passed the outdoors bill, while the House of Representa­tives has passed the wildlife legislatio­n.

“If COVID has taught people anything, it’s an appreciati­on of the great outdoors,” LaFrance said. “That’s the whole issue.”

 ?? Courtesy U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service / Courtesy U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service ?? Waterfowle­rs purchase the great majority of federal duck stamps and revenues fund refuge purchases and other conservati­on programs, but a proposal to require a “hunting element” in the annual stamps image has even some hunters questionin­g the idea.
Courtesy U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service / Courtesy U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Waterfowle­rs purchase the great majority of federal duck stamps and revenues fund refuge purchases and other conservati­on programs, but a proposal to require a “hunting element” in the annual stamps image has even some hunters questionin­g the idea.
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