OR Bill to Allow Bear Hunting with Dogs may get Senate Hearing

The bill passed April 23 out of the House by a vote of 40-19, barely over the required two-thirds majority. It was referred to the Senate committee May 1. [file photo]

The bill passed April 23 out of the House by a vote of 40-19, barely over the required two-thirds majority. It was referred to the Senate committee May 1. [Bear Hunting Blog file photo]

Oregon State Sen. Alan Bates believes a bill that would allow counties to opt out of 18-year-old bans on sport-hunting cougars and bears with hounds and baiting bears likely will get a public hearing in a Senate committee this session amid heavy lobbying both to air it and to quell it.

If so, then House Bill 2624 would become the first such House bill to get a Senate hearing since Measure 18′s passage in 1994 enacted the statewide baiting and hounding bans.

“We haven’t really decided but my sense right now is we’ll probably give it a public hearing,” said Bates, D-Medford, a member of the Senate Environment and Natural Resource Committee, where the bill currently sits.

But whether it makes it to the full Senate for a vote is “up in the air,” Bates said. “It could go either way.

Read the rest of the article by clicking here!

Story by: Mark Freeman
Source: Mail Tribune
Bear Hunting Blog

Michigan Bear Hunters Association

Michigan Black Hunters Association

Michigan Black Hunters Association [bear Hunting Blog file photo]

If you would like information or would like to become a member of the Michigan Bear Hunters Association, please click the link.

Today, our work is more important than ever. The bear, though its numbers are healthy, is facing several threats, including loss of habitat, particularly in the Lower Peninsula. Bear hunters have also been put on notice by organized animal rightists that they have targeted Michigan to outlaw our sport. But fighting for the bear and for bear hunting is something we’ve done hard and successfully for years.

MBHA’s roots were men and women who loved the sound of hounds on trail. Typically, hound men and hound women are equally at home chasing fox, raccoon, coyote, bobcat or bear. MBHA became a conservation organization that was an advocate for all these sports, with the primary emphasis on the black bear. Since the ’50s, through its association with MUCC, members of the state Legislature, the state Department of Conservation and its offspring, the Department of Natural Resources, MBHA has been in the forefront of Michigan conservation.

Early on, MBHA leaders fought to protect the bear by making the state change its status from vermin to game animal. Thus protected by seasons and bag limits and methods of take, the black bear has thrived. Successful MBHA initiatives have included the protection of the bear and bobcat by limiting their take to regular hunting seasons, the removal of the coyote bounty, the registration of all harvested bobcats and bears for scientific purposes, the removal of the bear from the small-game license and then the deer license, the law limiting dogs on a bear chase to six and baits per hunter to three, the ban on shooting cubs, the special archery bear season and many bear research and habitat improvement programs.

MBHA has always encouraged its members to learn wildlife conservation practices and to embrace the sportsman’s ethic. Most regulations MBHA has backed were designed to meet that end and to demonstrate to the general public that bear hunters are indeed concerned about the quality of the hunt as they practice it. Through the years, however, MBHA and the bear hunters it now supports-baiters, hound men and still hunters-have had to endure attacks on their sports. Yet despite stable and increasing bear populations, these attacks have been mounting, not only elsewhere, but here in Michigan too.

MBHA is committed to repel these assaults by educating the public and our legislators. MBHA is also pledged to conserve the black bear by pushing for increased research and enlightened management and is resolved to ensure MBHA is committed to repel these assaults by educating the public and our legislators. MBHA is also pledged to conserve the black bear by pushing for increased research and enlightened management and is resolved to ensure hunters have equitable regulations by pressing for them with the DNR.

We, the members of MBHA, invite all bear hunters, and others who agree with our cause, to join our association so we can better protect the bear and the sport of bear hunting.

Source: Michigan Bear Hunters Association
For more information on Bear Hunting in Michigan, click the active link – Bear Hunting Blog

North Carolina Bear Hunters Association

Bear Hunting in North Carolina

North Carolina Bear Hunters Association [Bear Hunting Blog file photo]

If you would like information or would like to become a member of the North Carolina Bear Hunters Association, please click the link.

We invite you to join the only statewide association dedicated to bear hunting and hunting with dogs. We’ve lost Washington, Oregon, most of California, Quebec, and now Ontario, so don’t wait until it’s too late.

North Carolina, long recognized as the bear hunting stronghold of the nation is at serious risk. Legislative experts agree that the southeast and especially North Carolina will soon be the next wildlife battleground between hunter and anti-hunting extremists.

Protect your rights; join the one organization that doesn’t quit, the NCBHA. Considered by many, as the most determined and energetic sport-hunting organization in North Carolina. So be counted, where and when it counts most. Join the NCBHA!!!

Source: North Carolina Bear Hunters Association
For more information on Bear Hunting in North Carolina, click the active link – Bear Hunting Blog

Virginia Bear Hunters Association

Hunting Black Bear in Virginia

Virginia Bear Hunters Association [Bear Hunting Blog file photo]

If you would like information or would like to become a member of the Virginia Bear Hunters Association, please click the link.

The Virginia Bear Hunters Association is dedicated to the preservation of hunting bears with sporting dogs and to sound wildlife management principles. In order to preserve hunting bears with sporting dogs we have several goals that we achieve.

We must continue clean, ethical hunting standards and practice fair chase and sportsman-like hunting. We must improve our relationship with the private landowner and eliminate trespassing issues. We must continue to build on our working relationship with the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries, the National Forest Service and the Virginia legislature.

We must project a positive image of the bear-hound hunter in Virginia by working with state and local charitable organizations. We must maintain and build on our alliances with other hunting groups and organizations. We must continue to involve young hunters in bear hunting with sporting dogs to insure the future of our sport.

Source: Virginia Bear Hunters’ Association
or more information on Virginia Bear Hunting, click the active link – Bear Hunting Blog

West Virginia Bear Hunters Association

Bear Hunting in West Virginia

West Virginia Bear Hunters Association

If you would like information or would like to become a member of the West Virginia Bear Hunters Association, please click the link.

As you all have probably have heard now that Gary Knapp has stepped down from the president position. He has done a great deal for us in his last 30 plus years fighting for us dog hunters. I myself and others have seen him in action, fight for us. I am sure he will continue to fight; it is in his blood I believe. He probably just won’t be playing such an active role now. As I would like to think him on behalf of the West Virginia Bear Hunters Association, for everything he has done in the past and also in the future.

I would like to thank everyone for giving me this opportunity. I know I have a big set of shoes to fill and will do my best to fill them. We still have a bumpy road ahead of us. I have had the opportunity this past Thursday to go out with bear biologist to locate a sow and her cub. Unfortunately we were unable to locate her she had moved out of her den. The cub was also not there which he should have been. Well I guess you can say we had a good walk and training for me before I hit the woods for training season. As training season now comes along please remember that you represent something bigger than just yourself. You represent all bear hunters. How people see what you do is how they see us all. I am just asking you to be polite and respectful whenever possible.

Thank you
Eric Beck
WVBHA PRESIDENT

Update:  The website for the West Virginia Bear Hunters Association is offline and has been for a while.  We have no further information.

Source:  West Virginia Bear Hunters Association
For more information on West Virginia Bear Hunting, please click the active link.
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