FatCanyoner wrote:G'day folks,
......The following info come from the National Parks Association of NSW (go to http://npansw.org.au/ if you want to read more). I'll be attending.
**RALLY: No hunting in NSW National Parks!**
11am Thurs 14 June, Parliament House, Sydney
The bill to allow volunteer hunters in National Parks is likely to be introduced to parliament next Thursday 14 June. We need a large crowd- join us outside Parliament House in Sydney at 11am next Thursday 14 June to show the Government that we will not stand for hunting in our National Parks.
The Premier of NSW has broken his pre-election promise to keep recreational shooting out of our National Parks. He has announced that the government will be opening up 34 National Parks, 31 Nature Reserves and 14 State Conservation Areas across the state to volunteer hunters.
During his first week in government, the Premier made a strong promise to environment groups and the people of NSW that he would not allow shooting in National Parks. Now he has done a deal with the Shooters and Fishers Party so that they will support his electricity privatisation bill.
National Parks are for the protection of nature and for the enjoyment of the NSW public. This decision by the government compromises the values of national parks and raises public safety concerns. Contrary to government claims, this is not an effective or cost-efficient way of controlling feral animals.
FatCanyoner wrote: I'll be attending
Tony wrote:This just get worse with this recreational hunting in NP's, it is looking like that the National Parks are going to be closed to all other park users when the recreational hunters want to go hunting.
Schedule 1 [21] provides that the power of an inspector to require a vehicle to stop
so that it can be searched may be exercised without the inspector being accompanied
by a police officer.
,proposed section 55A makes it an offence to interfere with a person who is
lawfully hunting game animals on public hunting land in accordance with the
authority conferred by a game hunting licence
The Bill also amends certain other legislation:
(b) to require the Game Council to be consulted before any pest control order is
made declaring a game animal to be a pest,
NEW STATE FOREST OPENED TO HUNTING!
Pteropus wrote:The Game Council does seem to be a personal club for hunters. This link shows the current chairman, John Mumford and his son out hunting. Do other government websites show their councillors out doing their hobbies? I am full of confidence that they will make sensible decisions that have the environment's best interests at stake when declaring an animal a pest..
Anyhow, here is the Game Council's media release, that they are "ready to help National Parks in game and feral animal control"
It is a deeply flawed, quasi-public gift to the Shooters Party, compromised by hunting factions, jobs for hunters, dominant personalities and profound and unsolvable conflicts of interests
But allowing a government agency that is supposed to regulate hunting legislation to be dominated by representatives of hunting clubs does not exactly endow it with a clear and unambiguous field of action.
What other NSW agency, for instance, spends tens of thousands of dollars on ads featuring the chairman, who also happened to be the chairman of the Shooters Party, and a political candidate at the next state election?
Or was it when our expensive compliance team – equipped with four-wheel drives, satellite phones, all-terrain tyres, inspectorial powers, quad bikes, and seemingly unlimited expense accounts – did not make one arrest at a huge illegal pig-dog hunting event in a southern NSW forest? Despite a number of our game managers being present, the illegal hunters were let off with warnings.
Three other sacked Game Council employees have backed some of Mr Dixon’s claims, particularly that jobs are given to recreational hunters while they, with their backgrounds in environmental science and feral animal control, have been forced out.
One told the Herald it is a privileged ”boys’ club of trophy deer hunters” which – rather than trying to eradicate the animals from state forests – limits the number of bucks that may be shot to preserve the sport and its prized targets, the stags with their antlers.
,proposed section 55A makes it an offence to interfere with a person who is
lawfully hunting game animals on public hunting land in accordance with the
authority conferred by a game hunting licence
FatCanyoner wrote:“It’s got to be planned shooting or poisoning and trapping, otherwise whoever goes in there hunting them will just scatter them all over the place and make them harder to cull.”
wildwalks wrote:Hi All
Looks like bad news (depending which side of the fence you are on with this debate).
I just heard that the Recreational Hunting Bill in NSW NP (amoung other things) was passed today - with no ammendments (which is very surprising)
So there is a 6month period untill the legislation comes into play.
The game is not all over yet, but this is obviouldy a harder battle to win now.
Will let you know more as it comes in. I am updating the maps, and stuff on nohunting.wildwalks.com
Thanks again for good natured debate.
Matt
Tony wrote:Unfortunately at best we are stuck with this bad decision for many years, the no-hunting organisations will have to get more political involved and hopefully will have some influence at the next NSW elections.
Pteropus wrote:Apparently there was some debate about an urgent amendment to the bill because the bill would allow hunters to use self-loading rifles and pump-action shotguns? Perhaps they allowed that to pass as well?
phan_TOM wrote:Pteropus wrote:Apparently there was some debate about an urgent amendment to the bill because the bill would allow hunters to use self-loading rifles and pump-action shotguns? Perhaps they allowed that to pass as well?
I'm pretty sure that I heard on the radio this morning that those weapons won't be allowed, a tiny win but a win nonetheless...
I also noticed this comment that came out of the debate, but was not suprised by it. When Greens MP Jeremy Buckingham accused the Game Council of taking millions in kickbacks during the debate, MP Robert Brown said "Unfortunately we're in a modern era so I can't take you outside and beat you to death"...
Its astonishing that people like that hold such political sway over important decisions that affect us all...
phan_TOM wrote:..I also noticed this comment that came out of the debate, but was not suprised by it. When Greens MP Jeremy Buckingham accused the Game Council of taking millions in kickbacks during the debate, MP Robert Brown said "Unfortunately we're in a modern era so I can't take you outside and beat you to death"...
Its astonishing that people like that hold such political sway over important decisions that affect us all...
The Hon. JEREMY BUCKINGHAM: This is a dangerous bill. The Government's credibility has been shot to pieces. It has been exposed for the sham it is. I read onto the record the contribution of Mr David Dixon, a resident of Orange, who used to work for the Game Council New South Wales. He used to be its communications director. He had this to say about the Game Council and his experience with it—which is the same experience as all those who see the big men of the Game Council driving around in their flashy utes. They buy expensive guns and all they want to do is shoot some animals and have them stuffed. All that Shooters and Fishers Party members are interested in doing is mounting deer; they want to stick a deer head on their wall. David Dixon knows about the Game Council and he knows about mounting deer. He said:
But after 12 years at three government agencies, I didn't quite expect to find myself living in the hunting fraternity's ongoing fantasy of making killing animals for sport socially acceptable. It was like a continuing serialisation of Razorback (or was it Wake in Fright?)
Sadly, it is reality. Mr David Dickson continued:
<29>
Game Council NSW is not a modern government agency dispassionately fulfilling its statutory object: 'To provide for the effective management of introduced species of game animals and to promote responsible and orderly hunting of those game animals on public and private land and of certain pest animals on public land.' It is a deeply flawed, quasi-public gift to the Shooters Party, compromised by hunting factions, jobs for hunters, dominant personalities and profound and unsolvable conflicts of interests.
He worked for the Game Council. I live in Orange and this is also my experience of the Game Council. It is a little fiefdom for Brian Boyle and his Shooters and Fishers Party mates. There is a $1 million kickback for these guys, the model train engineers party—an irrelevance and an absolute disgrace.
The Hon. Robert Brown: Point of order: The member knows that it is disorderly to make imputations of impropriety, or dare I say even corruption, against other members in this House. The member implied that we were taking kickbacks. I ask that you direct the member to retract his comments.
The DEPUTY-PRESIDENT (The Hon. Jennifer Gardiner): Order! I ask the Hon. Jeremy Buckingham to retract imputations against any other member in the House.
The Hon. JEREMY BUCKINGHAM: To the point of order: I am not quite clear what the imputation was.
The Hon. Duncan Gay: That's not our problem.
The Hon. Robert Brown: You pointed at me and you said—
The Hon. JEREMY BUCKINGHAM: I am asking the Deputy-President to direct me as to what the imputation was that I am to withdraw.
The Hon. Dr Peter Phelps: To the point of order: The Hon. Jeremy Buckingham said, "They have taken $1 million in kickbacks."
The Hon. Robert Brown: And he pointed at me.
The Hon. JEREMY BUCKINGHAM: Further to the point of order: I said "they"; I did not identify the Hon. Robert Brown.
The Hon. Dr Peter Phelps: You pointed over there.
The Hon. JEREMY BUCKINGHAM: I was waving my arms around generally.
The Hon. Robert Brown: Further to the point of order: I do not have a thin skin but when a guy looks at you and points at you and says on the record of this House, "They took $1 million in kickbacks", that is impugning my reputation. I ask you to withdraw it here. Unfortunately, we are in a modern era so I cannot take you outside and beat you to death.
The Hon. JEREMY BUCKINGHAM: Point of order: I would like it acknowledged in the House that the Hon. Robert Brown has just said, "I cannot take you outside and beat you to death." I ask the member to withdraw that comment.
The Hon. Robert Brown: Would you like an apology, Jeremy?
The Hon. JEREMY BUCKINGHAM: I will go outside anytime with you.
The DEPUTY-PRESIDENT (The Hon. Jennifer Gardiner): Order! The Hon. Robert Brown has taken offence—
The Hon. JEREMY BUCKINGHAM: I withdraw my comment.
The Hon. Cate Faehrmann: Point of order: The Hon. Robert Brown just said something highly offensive to the Hon. Jeremy Buckingham.
The Hon. Duncan Gay: He has already done that.
The Hon. CATE FAEHRMANN: No, he has not. That also must be dealt with.
The Hon. Robert Brown: I lost my temper. I am sorry for what I said, Jeremy. I should not have said it.
The DEPUTY-PRESIDENT (The Hon. Jennifer Gardiner): Order! I ask all members to be civil for the remainder of the debate on this bill.
The Hon. JEREMY BUCKINGHAM: It is certainly a passionate issue. The people of New South Wales are watching. It goes to the culture and nature of this organisation. That is the second time I have had a death threat from the Shooters and Fishers Party in this House. It will be interesting to see how we go with interference from the Shooters. [Time expired.]
Tony wrote:NSW Hunting In National Parks, Bill Released
Some more regional news articles
A squealy pest issue letting loose
MPs should explain stance on shooting
Pteropus wrote:Yep, MP Robert Brown said that. I took this transcript from the NSW Parliament Hansard Transscript to show some context...
Crazy...
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