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		Illinois lawmakers propose additional fishing fee to fight Asian carp
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		 [March 25, 2021] 
		By Cole Lauterbach 
		(The Center Square) – In addition to the 
		state’s existing stamp, Illinois lawmakers are working on adding another 
		fee for those who want permission to fish in the state’s rivers and 
		various water holes that would go toward fighting off the spread of 
		invasive Asian carp.
 Lawmakers in the House Agriculture and Conservation Committee forwarded 
		House Bill 2744 to the floor for consideration Monday after approving it 
		along party lines. If enacted, it would implement the aquatic 
		conservation stamp, a $5 stamp that fishermen must purchase before 
		they’re able to legally fish in the state. It would be the same cost for 
		in-state residents and those from elsewhere. It would become active in 
		2022.
 
		
		 
		Republicans in the committee rejected the plan because of the extra cost 
		on fishermen.
 “It is still a fee increase that everybody would pay,” said state Rep. 
		Andrew Chesney, R-Freeport.
 
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			James Rundblom fishes while on vacation at Jim Edgar Panther Creek 
			State Fish and Wildlife Area near Chandlerville, Ill., Tuesday, July 
			22, 2008.AP Photo/Seth Perlman 
            
			 
              
            The funds would be sent to the Aquatic Conservation Stamp Fund, 
			whose purpose would be to aid in the fight against Asian carp, an 
			invasive species of fish that’s been steadily infesting Illinois’ 
			waterways on its way to Lake Michigan. 
 “They just don’t belong in the lake,” said Jonathan Altenberg, 
			director of the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative. 
			“They could destroy the habitat. It’s a real danger for us.”
 
 Altenberg said states and the federal government are spending 
			significant sums of money to protect recreational and commercial 
			fishing industries worth “tens of billions of dollars.”
 
 In January, the Army Corps of Engineers started to implement 
			mitigation measures meant to keep the invasive species out of one of 
			the continent’s largest bodies of freshwater.
 
 Illinois residents already pay $15 for an annual fishing license. 
			That cost rises to $31.50 for out-of-state fishermen. Senior 
			citizens would be waived from the fee.
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