Good News, Bad News, Fun News

Oct 17, 2012
Yesterday, an email from a reader at a state wildlife agencies asked if I had seen the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) "sequesterable and exempt budgetary resources" report regarding the Sequestration Transparency Act, part of a deal worked out last year to end the ongoing debt-ceiling crisis.

I hadn't. There's no possible way for anyone to be read-in on everything distributed from DC. But I got a copy of the report - and I didn't like what I found.

No one else who spends dollars taxed (voluntarily) under either the Pittman-Robertson or Dingell-Johnson acts will, either. The reason? Sequestration is a fancy word for simply taking funds from existing programs under the guise of reducing the federal deficit.

Under the Budget Control Act of 201, the OMB is required to enact a plan (The Sequestration Transparency Act) to reduce the deficit by $1.2 trillion dollars should the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction fail to propose-and Congress enact- a deficit reduction plan.

As we know, there's no budget agreement - and none on the horizon. So...sequestration is the mandated next step.

Basically, the government takes (sequesters) a portion of allocated funds - supposedly across the board - to reduce the deficit. As described by the OMB, "Sequestration is a blunt and indiscriminate instrument." It is also described as "not the responsible way for our Nation to achieve deficit reduction."

It's a pre-action casualty list for mandated funding cuts. It is the nuclear option for deficit reduction.

There's no way to plan for the sort of cuts described in the report.

Federal aid for wildlife restoration, state wildlife grants, the Sport Fishing Restoration Fund and the National Park Service will all be cut- significantly. The National Park Service alone stands to lose more than $183 million in operating funds.

To get some perspective on the looming prospect, I reached out to Jeff Crane, President of the Congressional Sportsmen's Foundation and Ron Regan, Executive Director of the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies for their sense of what sequestration might actually mean.

Neither painted a pretty picture.

"Basically," says Crane, "OMB's sequestering proposal is a raid on the Fish and Wildlife Trust."

And, Crane pointed out, the "raid" comes in the year we celebrate the seventy-fifty anniversary of the fund that has been instrumental in protecting America's wildlife and wild places.

That's not a pretty picture. The AFWA's Ron Regan didn't do anything to lighten the mood.

"We're looking at big cuts," he said, "and the Trust doesn't seem to be a legitimate candidate for sequestration." As he pointed out, this "trust" is essentially a bond not to use collected funds for anything other than their intended purpose.

Both Crane and Regan say meetings are underway to look at all possible "remedies". Generally, "remedy" means one of two things: legal action to force a halt to the proposed action, or legislative action to change the sequestration rules. Legal action isn't always a good option, but legislative actions, especially when they involve money, don't happen overnight.

Whatever the various outdoor organizations decide as their best course of action, we'd better all start paying attention- and let our elected officials in Washington know we're not going to sit still while the Fish and Wildlife Trust gets the same treatment as the Social Security Trust fund.

Our contributions are voluntary, but our voicing our dissent is mandatory.

But not everything's bad news....For instance....today's news section reports tonight's episode of "Sons of Guns" on Discovery Channel (9PM EST) will answer a question jokingly bantered between two industry families: Who's the better shooting family- Hornady or Brownell?

No, I won't give away the ending, because I only know half the results. Half time, as proven in Monday Night's NFL game between the San Diego Chargers and the Denver Broncos, is no time to start settling bets. But I'd bet they have fun settling the question via a three-gun match between father/son teams Frank/Pete Brownell and Steve/Jason Hornady.

FYI, these are the same Hornady family members who were pilloried on a discussion board over the weekend after someone reported that a Hornady family member had contributed to the political campaign of former US-Senator Bob Kerry (D-NE). It was accurate, and kicked off angry rants that devolved from a call to a boycott of Hornady products into a digital lynch mob.

What bothers me is that it didn't seem to matter that the family member wasn't involved in the Hornady company, doesn't own any of it, and gets no financial benefit from it. And let's not forget the way Steve and Jason Hornady give to any number of groups that support shooting, hunting and the Second Amendment. The name was enough to start the pot boiling.

That same digital lynching could happen to any of us who are "blessed" with a family member who doesn't share our political viewpoint. Unfortunately, it seems this lynch mob may have been kicked off by someone unhappy that Hornady's financial support wasn't coming their way.

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Finally, a quick plug for a pre-SHOT Show event: the charity golf event in partnership with the PGA TOUR for Birdies for the Brave. It's January 12-13 at TPC Summerlin in Las Vegas and proceeds will benefit eight military "home-front groups".

Starts on Saturday, January 12, with an evening reception and dinner. The golf is Sunday, January 13. Each foursome will be paired with a wounded warrior or military member, and the entire event will be military-themed, including static displays and "engaging contests."

Last year's event raised $70,000 for the nine charities supported by Birdies for the Brave, and the goal this year is $100,000. I'm told there are still sponsor opportunities and playing slots available, so it might be a great time to get together before SHOT, have some fun and help out those heroes who have "been there and done that" for us.

Learn how you and/or your company can get involved in this year's tournament at:http://shotshow.org/Birdies-for-the-Brave-Golf-Event/

--Jim Shepherd