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U.S. spending bill, a tall tale for fishermen
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[December 15, 2014]
By Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The fine print of a
massive $1.1 trillion spending bill before the United States Congress
includes a passage considered a "high priority" by lawmakers that could
resolve a burning issue among the country's 40 million anglers: does the
federal government need to regulate fishing tackle?
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The unexpected provision buried in the 1,603-page bill tracks back
- as so much legislation does in Washington - to an influential
lobbying group, the National Rifle Association.
The NRA, which represents American gun owners and sportsmen, wants
to stop the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency from regulating the
lead content of both fishing tackle and firearms ammunition.
Conservationists have long clamored for a crackdown, partly due to
concerns about lead in drinking water, but the debate has outraged
some hunters and fishermen.
Republicans in the House of Representatives this week used the
spending bill to try to block federal interference.
"It was a House priority," said one Republican aide familiar with
the provision in a bill that the Senate weighed in a rare weekend
session.
An NRA publication called the efforts to regulate lead in ammunition
and fishing gear "hysteria." The powerful gun rights group also
contends the regulation is not backed by sound science.
The Republican-run House Appropriations Committee touts the
provision as protecting Americans' constitutional right to bear arms
by fending off a government assault on ammunition as well as tackle.
The American Sportfishing Association advanced a practical argument
against Washington's meddling: "Non-lead fishing tackle products can
cost from ten to 20 times more than lead products. Non-lead products
may not be as available and most do not perform as well."
Dale Denney, whose company Bearpaw Outfitters runs guided hunting
and fishing trips in Western states, said the legislation counters
"an overreaction in wanting to ban lead."
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The emotion runs almost as deep as anger from opponents of
energy-saving light bulbs now crowding out old-fashioned
incandescent bulbs. Republicans also addressed this in the budget
bill by banning the Obama administration's "onerous light bulb
standard."
The federal law passed in 2007 does not ban incandescent light
bulbs, but it does require them to be made more energy-efficient in
a phased process through 2020.
Meanwhile, anglers and hunters watched intently as Congress fought
over whether to fund continued government operations and programs
ranging from space exploration to soybean supports.
City slickers like Democratic Senator Charles Schumer, who grew up
in Brooklyn, are tracking the legislation as well.
"One of my great trips is to go for small-mouth bass in Lake Ontario
every summer," Schumer observed, deftly deflecting the fight over
getting the lead out.
(Additional reporting by Eric M. Johnson in Seattle; editing by
Marilyn Thompson and G Crosse)
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