![]() Thursday, April 26, 2007
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Competition Ralph Hamilton of Georgetown, Indiana is the winner of Spring Mill State Park's inaugural annual poetry contest, having been selected from 140 entries received from around the state. More » Employment Opportunities The Quality Deer Management Association, the nation's leading whitetail conservation organization, is seeking qualified candidates for the position of Advertising and Publishing Coordinator. More » Events The Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission, the St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge, Wakulla County, St. Marks Refuge Association and the Sport Fish Restoration Program will offer a free Kids' Fishing Clinic for children 4-16 Saturday, May 19 at the Wooley Park in Panacea. More » Fish & Wildlife The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) has tentatively scheduled a razor clam dig starting May 4 at two ocean beaches. The digs will be the last of the season. More » Funding Eight researchers and organizations were recently awarded more than $150,000 for projects to benefit Ohio's wildlife diversity. More » Habitat Pheasants Forever (PF) announces a new joint partnership called Schoolyard Habitats designed to establish working outdoor classrooms for students in central Indiana. The areas will create environments that allow students to learn science, math, and other subjects through the outdoors. More » Media Outdoor Channel Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ:OUTD) has sold all assets, liabilities and operations related to its Membership division segment to Thomas H. Massie, vice-chairman of the board of Outdoor Channel Holdings for $3.6 million cash. The sale includes all shares and membership interest in Gold Prospector's Association of America LLC (GPAA) and LDMA-AU, Inc (Lost Dutchman's) and represents the net book value of the division, including approximately $2.4 million of cash on its books. More » Media Advisory The media is invited to a special groundbreaking for the Bass Pro Shops coming to Denham Springs, Louisiana later this year. The event will be held Thursday, May 3 at the store site in the Denham Springs development project at I-12 and Range Avenue. More » New Products Sportsman's Condo, "The Pioneer In Solid Blind Technology," www.sportsmanscondo.com is proud to announce the addition of their new "Hunter Green" coloration to their 2007 product lineup. The new color will be available on all 4 sizes of the Sportsman's Condo shooting house. More » People The California Department of Fish and Game (DFG) has selected Jim Goodman as the 2006 Hunter Education Instructor of the Year. Goodman was nominated by his peers and selected out of a field of 720 statewide hunter education instructors. More » Retail When the newest Bass Pro Shop opens today in Bolingbrook, Illinois the first 500 customers daily through Sunday will receive a special gift ranging from commemorative lures to duck calls, LED Fans and other Bass Pro Shops items. More » Television The Sunday, May 6 episode of "FLW Outdoors" on FSN television will feature the conclusion of the $1 million Wal-Mart FLW Tour event on the Fort Loudoun-Tellico lakes in Knoxville, Tennessee. More » Briefly Only weeks after the acquisition of Pure Fishing, small appliances and consumer goods company Jarden Corp. (JAH.N) says it will buy sports equipment maker K2 Inc. (KTO.N) for $15.50 per K2 share in cash and stock. Including debt assumption, the deal will be valued at around $1.2 billion. Jarden markets a variety of brands, including Mr. Coffee, Sunbeam, Coleman, and the recently- acquired Pure Fishing. Jarden also said their net income for the first quarter ended March 31 was $1.4 million or 2 cents per share, down from 9 cents per share last year.
Pike County, Illinois Votes "No"
Pike County is renowned for some of the best whitetail and wild turkey hunting in Illinois. That deserved reputation has turned hunting into a significant revenue source for the county and its residents. A threat to that revenue may cause Pittsfield, the county seat, to someday be known as the spot where a quiet groundswell of protest against the growing proliferation of firearms restrictions finally erupted into grassroots action. On Tuesday evening the Pike County Board citing the Second Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, passed a resolution saying no to any state legislation limiting the right to keep and bear arms would be recognized in Pike County. Their resolution minces no words: "Now, Therefore, It Be And Is Hereby Resolved, that the people of Pike County, Illinois, do oppose the enactment of any legislation that would infringe upon the Right of the People to Keep and Bear Arms, and deem such laws to be Unconstitutional and beyond lawful Legislative Authority." In short, no state law placing any limitations on firearms will be valid in Pike County. This action is aimed squarely at a measure currently being proposed by the state legislature. This proposed state legislation would outlaw semiautomatic firearms and ban .50 caliber firearms (including muzzleloaders). It is being championed by two Chicago residents: Mayor Richard M. Daley and Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich. It may be popular in Chicago political circles, but it's not going to win Blagojevich any votes in Pike County. One of the two Pike County Board Members who sponsored the Resolution, Robert Kanady, says he hopes the measure would "be the spark that lights a cannon heard all across the United States." Co-sponsor Mark Mountain said: "We have to stand up. We have to voice our opinion. As an individual, it doesn't mean much. As a county, it means more. As three or four counties, it means a lot." In recognition of the resolution's importance, the Tuesday meeting was reportedly the most heavily attended public meeting in county history. Residents overflowed the courtroom, spilling out into the courthouse rotunda. The measure also had extensive public discussion. At one point, a reluctant commissioner raised concerns that perhaps the measure was a "political hot button" and not something in which a county government should involve itself. That drew an emotional response from one resident: "This proposed legislation would greatly harm the citizens of this county, and we believe the members of our County Board are bound by the oaths of office to speak for us on this issue. "The issue here is not politics, the issue is freedom. Freedom began in this nation more than 200 years ago, when small groups of people like us, in towns even smaller than ours, gathered together to tell the King who tried to rule them from a huge city an ocean away, 'Enough is enough!' Freedom will only survive today if we have the courage to do the same." In closing, he offered: "In this room tonight we are not conservatives; we are not liberals. In this room tonight we are not Democrats; we are not Republicans. In this room tonight we are Americans." The standing ovation he received was apparently enough to convince the Commission to overwhelmingly pass the measure. Pike County's resolution may, indeed, be unprecedented in modern history. Our research (albeit brief at this point) has yet to produce another instance of a county government having voted to refuse to enforce proposed state statutes it viewed to be in conflict with federal law. And the Pike County Resolution minces no words as to why they felt the action necessary: "the People of Pike County, Illinois, derive great economic benefit from all safe forms of firearms recreation, hunting, and shooting conducted within Pike County using all types of firearms allowable under the United States Constitution and the Constitution of the State of Illinois." The resolution also cites the Commission's sworn duty to uphold the United States Constitution and the Constitution of the State of Illinois, saying the proposed legislation currently under consideration by the Illinois State Legislature would "infringe the Right of the People to Keep and Bear Arms, and would ban the possession and use of firearms now employed by individual citizens in Pike County, Illinois, for defense of Life, Liberty, and Property, and would ban the possession and use of firearms now employed for safe forms of firearms recreation, hunting, and shooting conducted within Pike County, Illinois. In Canada, several provincial governments flatly refused to enforce revisions to the country's firearms registry. The provincial governments said the changers were not only ill advised, but unenforceable. Eventually their resistance became a major political factor, turning out the liberal ruling party and electing a conservative government that has systematically dismantled the registry. The decision in Pike County was not one that was lightly made, nor considered. Officials had carried on quiet talks with outside Illinois before Tuesday evening's vote. We have learned those talks have led other local governments to begin considering similar measures as a means of expressing their displeasure with attempts to legislate firearms out of the hands of law-abiding citizens. Individuals involved in those conversations speak of the frustration of a large, and formerly quiet group of citizens who feel the will of the majority of the people is being ignored by legislators. Should Pike County's resolution catch on across Illinois and correspondingly across America, this single action taken by a small county government may, indeed, ignite a chain of similar actions across the country that serve notice that the majority opinion of Americans heartland regarding firearms will no longer be ignored. We will keep you posted. --Jim Shepherd
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