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Hey guys, I saw this aricle on anoher site I stop in occasionally. Some good info. The eaestern seaboard guys sure do screwed on these blue laws.

The Truth About Sunday Hunting: Why Hunters Shouldn`t Be Treated as Second-Class Citizens

In the early days of America, so-called blue laws restricted many activities on Sunday. In recent years, however, state governments have recognized that the people`s right to choose for themselves what they do, or don`t do, on Sunday is more consistent with America`s founding principals. Present day bans on Sunday hunting are the last holdouts of these blue laws, and hunters are questioning why they are being treated differently from their fellow citizens.



The majority of hunters will agree that the biggest obstacle to hunting, and the biggest obstacle to recruiting new hunters, is lack of access and opportunity to hunt. By restricting Sunday hunting, states are not only limiting opportunities for today`s hunters but are making it harder to recruit new hunters to carry on our proud heritage. Anti-hunting groups understand this, that`s why they oppose lifting Sunday hunting bans--they don`t want a new generation of hunters to enter the field. This opposition to Sunday hunting is in fact opposition to the future of hunting itself.

Restrictions on Sunday hunting treat hunters as second-class citizens. Other outdoor activities are allowed on Sunday, including fishing, hiking and golf. By restricting hunting and not other activities, state governments are sending a not so subtle message to hunters and non-hunters alike that there is something wrong with hunting, that it isn`t as legitimate an activity. This message ignores the fact that hunters contribute billions of dollars to the benefit of wildlife, both through license fees and excise taxes paid on firearms and ammunition.

There are compelling reasons why Sunday hunting should be allowed:

Sunday hunting has no detrimental effect on wildlife populations. The 43 states that allow some form of Sunday hunting have healthy wildlife populations in those areas that can sustain them. In fact the states with the most abundant game populations allow Sunday hunting. Those states that have recently removed prohibitions on Sunday hunting have not seen a negative impact on game populations. Allowing Sunday hunting will give state wildlife agencies more flexibility in managing populations. The extra day a week for hunting will give the agencies the ability to increase hunting in areas of overpopulation by encouraging hunters to go afield.
The most common reason that hunters stop hunting is lack of hunting opportunity. Hunting opportunities are largely decided by two factors: accessible land and available time. Since most hunters work Monday through Friday, a ban on Sunday hunting cuts their available hunting time in half.
Sunday hunting is an excellent way to recruit new hunters. Many young people have school or athletic obligations on Saturday. Allowing Sunday hunting means that parents can spend time hunting with their son or daughter, passing on a heritage that is so important to America. With the myriad of activities that compete for the attention of young people today, a restriction on Sunday hunting means many of them never take up the sport.
Sunday hunting will bring an economic benefit to many rural areas. Every day that hunters are in the field, they spend money on gas, food, lodging and the dozens of other incidentals that go along with a day`s hunt. The ripple effect of this spending can have a major impact on a rural town or county.
Out-of-state license revenue can grow as a result of Sunday hunting. Few hunters will take extended hunting trips to a state that won`t let them hunt one day of the week. These out-of-state hunters pay higher license fees that benefit the game department and also spend even more money on incidentals than in-state hunters.
Current Sunday hunting bans:

Currently seven states entirely prohibit hunting on Sunday for wild game; they are Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Virginia, New Jersey and Connecticut. All of these states have considered legislation to lift the bans in recent years. Repealing the Sunday hunting bans has been actively supported by the wildlife agencies in Maine and New Jersey.

Four states allow limited Sunday hunting: Maryland allows hunting on two Sundays during deer season; South Carolina allows Sunday hunting on private land only; North Carolina allows Sunday hunting on some federal installations; in 2001 West Virginia enacted legislation that allows Sunday hunting on private land, but each county can hold a referendum to ban Sunday hunting; currently 14 counties allow it.

Recently several states have recognized the folly of Sunday hunting bans:

New York: In 1996 New York opened Sunday hunting on three Sundays during deer season. Within five years the law was changed to allow all Sunday hunting, except on specifically designated lands.

Ohio: In 1998 Ohio passed a bill allowing a test of Sunday hunting on public lands for a period of three years. In 2002 the legislature made Sunday hunting permanent without opposition from groups that had concerns when the test began. The state wildlife agency supported the change.

Michigan: Sunday hunting was banned on private land in certain counties, but in 2003, all Sunday hunting closures were repealed. The bill was supported by the state wildlife agency.

None of these states have experienced the horror stories forecast by opponents of hunting. The states continue to have healthy wildlife populations. Hunters continue to behave in a responsible and safe manner. Church attendance remains unchanged. Landowner-hunter conflicts have not increased. In sum, Sunday hunting has had nothing but a beneficial impact on these states and the future of hunting in them.
 

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Many times, I feel closer to the Man upstairs while im hunting and seeing all of his creation rather than hearing about it in church.
 

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It actually blows my mind. I moved to NC from MI, where I was out in the field every Sunday during past seasons. I agree with you DC, the great outdoors could be looked at as the greatest church/cathedral (whatever you call it), ever built. I had no idea that States actually didn't allow Sunday hunting until I moved here. This will definitely take some getting used to. Well I guess at least I can still fish on Sunday. :rolleyes:
 

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i occasionally hunt sundays but usually dont hunt on sundays because i attend church, but i want the right to hunt if i wanted too! i would definitely fight that as long as its not an environment thing.
 

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MD expanded the Sunday hunting zones a bit this year. The problem here is the push back, there is an organized effort to limit hunting, am at a convention right now where the issue came up in conversation and next year various anti groups are going to push to limit Saturday hunting on some public hunting areas. It will eventually be approved.
 

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DC KILLER said:
Many times, I feel closer to the Man upstairs while im hunting and seeing all of his creation rather than hearing about it in church.
Well said! When out in nature, you get a strong feel for what He has created. Just sitting there hearing crickets chirp, the splash of a distant fish in the marsh, the buzz of teal screaming by, or maybe even the soft rustle of the wind through the marsh grass. Ohh man you can't get closer to God than that for me. Plus im only an hour and fifteen minutes away from the house and make it back home in time for church with the wife! The best of both worlds!!!
 

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ive always been against sunday hunting. it will never be overturned in this state. the city slobs and amish run the daylights outta everything the other 6 days. give the critters a break.

there are only so many "hunter days" that can be allowed. another weekend day would double the weekend kill which is already the majority. wanna hunt sundays in PA? get a crow call...
 

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Robn1020 said:
DC KILLER said:
Many times, I feel closer to the Man upstairs while im hunting and seeing all of his creation rather than hearing about it in church.
Well said! When out in nature, you get a strong feel for what He has created. Just sitting there hearing crickets chirp, the splash of a distant fish in the marsh, the buzz of teal screaming by, or maybe even the soft rustle of the wind through the marsh grass. Ohh man you can't get closer to God than that for me. Plus im only an hour and fifteen minutes away from the house and make it back home in time for church with the wife! The best of both worlds!!!
BS...none of either of these posts is illegal on sunday in any state. you can even listen to the crickets after dark...
 

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pennsyltucky said:
Robn1020 said:
DC KILLER said:
Many times, I feel closer to the Man upstairs while im hunting and seeing all of his creation rather than hearing about it in church.
Well said! When out in nature, you get a strong feel for what He has created. Just sitting there hearing crickets chirp, the splash of a distant fish in the marsh, the buzz of teal screaming by, or maybe even the soft rustle of the wind through the marsh grass. Ohh man you can't get closer to God than that for me. Plus im only an hour and fifteen minutes away from the house and make it back home in time for church with the wife! The best of both worlds!!!
BS...none of either of these posts is illegal on sunday in any state. you can even listen to the crickets after dark...
HUH?????? :huh:
 

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h2ofwlr: Great post.

pennsyltucky: I grew up in PA. Sunday hunting was just the way it was and I never thought about it. Now when I come back for the holidays. It really pisses me off. I can hunt by myself during the week when I'm there because I'm on vacation, but I want to hunt with my family and friends. They all have M-F jobs and most can't afford the vacation to go hunting. It literally cuts the number of days we can hunt together in half or eliminates them completely. Last year, I drove in on a Saturday and had to leave before the next weekend, so we got to hunt zero days, when we had a beautiful Sunday to be in the woods.

As far as giving the critters a break. Give me a break. As far as hunter days, it is actually numbers killed that is the important things. Granted allowing more people to hunt more days would reduce the number of days those that can hunt M-F would be permitted, but the vast majority of people are only able to hunt on Saturday and Sunday and they are getting screwed. Get a M-F job and go live in a state that allows Sunday hunting. I guarantee your opinion will change. You will get really pissed when you go back to PA and are sitting in front of a TV for no good reason.
 

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:thumbsup: well said spinner, we have enough organizations trying to take our hunting rights away. When you work m-f our weekends become our relaxation time. its time to take the kids out and teach them about the sport.

lee

identify before you shoot(keeps ya legal) :thumbsup: :smile:
 

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No hunting on sundays absolutly sucks.I work tues to sat,I hunt PA during bow season.I drive 7hrs roundtrip and have to use my vacation days to hunt one day. :thumbsdown:
Turkey hunting only till noon in PA sucks too :thumbsdown:
 

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Sunday hunting is a large point of contention with outdoorsmen and women here in NC. Every year or so a small group in the legislature pens a "feasibility study" to test the waters on the topic. Each and every time the results come back it is squashed.

I have sent numerous letters to legislators, Governors and the head of the wildlife commission in support of overturning the law. To date I have received nothing but positive response to the letters...however politicians being what they are still fail to realize how antiquated the reasoning is prohibiting Sunday hunting.

Many claim it's because of us being in the Bible Belt. Well, the map speaks for itself...of all Bible Belt states, NC is the only one that doesn't allow Sunday hunting.

Others claim it is an economic problem because game wardens would have to be paid extra to patrol on Sunday. Well, commercial and recreational fishing is allowed on Sunday so some wardens are already working. Plus Sunday hunting would bring in more than sufficient funds to cover any extra wildlife commission payroll through taxes from sporting accessories, motels, food, gas and other sundries consumed or purchased on that "extra day". Just ask the econmists in SC...they experienced huge economic growth stemming from the taxes and goods & services attributed to Sunday Hunting when they overturned their old law and allowed it.

Personally I think it's time for elected officials in all of the green & blue states on the enclosed map to come to terms with reality. Sportsmen and women want to have the opportunity to hunt on Sunday. Whether or not they choose to do so is a personal matter for them to decide upon, but don't prohibit us from having the choice.

As far as the number of available days go, us and the other states prohibiting Sunday hunting are actually penalized. Duck seasons are set by the feds to cover a fixed number of calendar days. Taking 1 of 7 days from us reduces our season by 14% as compared to neighboring states operating within the same window of time.
 
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