April 14, 2015

Hunting Preserves Bill Amended In Senate

stock photo

stock photo

The Senate Monday dramatically scaled back legislation regulating the state’s high fenced deer hunting preserves.

The future of the high fenced deer hunting industry has been the subject of ongoing legal action and debate at the legislature for more than a decade. New regulations in the proposed bill include a minimum acreage and fence height, and a provision requiring deer in the facilities to be born and raised in Indiana.

An earlier version of this year’s legislation would have allowed the industry to expand, creating new preserves.  But an amendment offered by LaGrange Republican Sue Glick, the bill’s Senate sponsor, says that only the four existing preserves can have permits.

“It would basically return us to the status quo, where we’re at now, but with the provisions for inspections by the Board of Animal Health, the inspections by the Department of Natural Resources,” Glick said.

Current owners can move their preserves somewhere else in the state or sell the preserves to someone else. Three different senators questioned whether that provision is a loophole that would lead to more preserves.  But Glick stated firmly that only four preserves can be allowed at any one time.

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