| 
			Hunting Works For Illinois launched to promote economy, huntingSportsmen, retailers and business leaders 
			team up to educate public, policy makers on economic impact of 
			hunting
 
   Send a link to a friend 
            
            [September 28, 2017]  
              Does blaze orange equal lots of green for the 
			economy? Sportsmen, retailers and business leaders throughout 
			Illinois say yes and getting that message out far and wide is the 
			goal of a new organization called Hunting Works For Illinois. | 
        
            | 
              
                
				 “When looking at the economy of Illinois, it’s hard to ignore 
				the size, scope and impact of hunters, hunting and the shooting 
				sports,” said Mark Denzler, COO of the Illinois Manufacturers 
				Association and a co-chair of Hunting Works For Illinois. 
              
                “Quite frankly, hunters spend millions of dollars each year in 
				Illinois, and much of that money goes to local business owners 
				and entrepreneurs. It’s true that hunters shop at Cabela’s and 
				Bass Pro, but hunters frequently support locally-owned sporting 
				goods stores, hardware stores, gas stations, restaurants, 
				hotels, and cafes all across Illinois.” 
              
                
				 
              
                Bill Fleishli, Executive Vice President of the Illinois 
				Petroleum Marketers Association, shared vital statistics on the 
				economic impact: “With 512,000 hunters spending an average of 
				$2,400 a year in Illinois, Hunting Works For Illinois highlights 
				the impact these hunters have on the state economy. In fact, 
				Illinois hunters spend over $273 million on hunting trips and 
				over $235 million on equipment. All told, hunters spend $1.3 
				billion annually in the state of Illinois.”
 While the economic contributions of hunters are considerable, 
				hunter spending also largely contributes to state conservation 
				efforts. In 1937 the Pittman-Robertson Act was signed by 
				President Roosevelt. This Act made it so hunters pay an 11 
				percent excise tax on equipment sales that is used to conserve 
				and restore habitat.
 
              
				[to top of second column] | 
              
 
              
“Hunting is extremely important to the overall health of 
Illinois’s wildlife populations and their habitats,” said Brittany Henry, 
Executive Director of the Jacksonville Convention and Visitors Bureau and one of 
the co-chairs of Hunting Works For Illinois. “Hunters not only support jobs and 
the economy, but the money hunters spend on their licenses and stamps, as well 
as the taxes they pay on equipment is all earmarked for conservation. That 
conservation translates into the beautiful wild places we have for people to not 
just hunt, but to hike, camp or go birdwatching.”
 
              
The newly formed Hunting Works For Illinois partnership has over 
50 partner organizations and will be adding dozens more in the weeks and months 
to come. The effort is supported by sporting organizations such as the National 
Shooting Sports Foundation. Hunting Works For Illinois and its partners will be 
active in the state, attending events and educating the public and elected 
officials on why hunting and the shooting sports are so important to Illinois’ 
economy.
 “We all benefit from a robust hunting heritage in Illinois,” said Peter Skosey 
from BNSF Railway and a co-chair of Hunting Works For Illinois. “I am very 
excited by what this group of unusual partners can get done on behalf of the 
hunting and shooting sports.”
 
			[Jenna Rainwater] 
			For more information on Hunting Works 
			For Illinois, please visit
			www.HUNTINGWORKSFORIL.com
			 |