2015 -- H 5669 | |
======== | |
LC001343 | |
======== | |
STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2015 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
AN ACT RELATING TO FISH AND WILDLIFE -- HUNTING--LEAD SHOT PROHIBITION | |
| |
Introduced By: Representatives Handy, Ajello, Palangio, and Lombardi | |
Date Introduced: February 26, 2015 | |
Referred To: House Environment and Natural Resources | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Chapter 20-13 of the General Laws entitled "Hunting and Hunting Safety" |
2 | is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: |
3 | 20-13-18. Lead shot prohibition. – (a) The general assembly hereby finds and declares |
4 | as follows: |
5 | (1) Rhode Island's wildlife species represent the state's rich natural resources and |
6 | environmental health and beauty. |
7 | (2) Rhode Island's wildlife species play an important role in the state's environmental |
8 | health. |
9 | (3) Fifty (50) years of research have shown that the presence of lead in the environment |
10 | poses an ongoing threat to the health of the general public and the viability of the state's wildlife |
11 | species. |
12 | (4) The United States Environmental Protection Agency defines lead as toxic to both |
13 | humans and animals, and lead can affect almost every organ and system in the human body, |
14 | including the heart, bones, intestines, kidneys, and reproductive and nervous systems. It interferes |
15 | with the development of the nervous system and is therefore particularly toxic to children, |
16 | causing potentially permanent learning and behavior disorders. |
17 | (5) Lead is a potent neurotoxin, for which no safe exposure level exists for humans. The |
18 | use of lead has been outlawed in and removed from the majority of paint, gasoline, children's |
19 | toys, and many other items where consumers are exposed to protect human health and wildlife. |
| |
1 | (6) Routes of human and wildlife exposure to lead include contaminated air, water, soil, |
2 | and food. Lead ammunition in felled wildlife is often consumed by other animal and passed along |
3 | the food chain. Dairy and beef cattle have developed lead poisoning after feeding in areas where |
4 | spent lead ammunition has accumulated. Spent lead ammunition can also be mingled into crops, |
5 | vegetation, and waterways. |
6 | (7) Efforts to limit wildlife exposure to lead ammunition have been successful. The |
7 | United States Fish and Wildlife Service banned the use of lead shot for waterfowl hunting |
8 | decades ago, and both hunting and waterfowl have thrived since. However, because those |
9 | restrictions only apply in certain areas or to the hunting of particular species, many species of |
10 | wildlife remain threatened by the use of lead ammunition and more protections are needed. These |
11 | successes have shown us how to extend protection from lead poisoning to other wildlife. |
12 | (8) A variety of nontoxic ammunition is readily available. Studies have shown that |
13 | nontoxic ammunition performs as well as, or better than, lead-based ammunition. |
14 | (9) Given the deleterious impacts of lead ammunition, a requirement for use of nontoxic |
15 | ammunition should be implemented as soon as practicable in Rhode Island. If the requirement for |
16 | use of nontoxic ammunition can be incrementally implemented sooner than a nonlead |
17 | requirement can be fully implemented, such incremental protections should be implemented by |
18 | the department of environmental management on a rolling basis as practicable. |
19 | (b) Except as provided in subsections (d) and (f) of this section, and as soon as can be |
20 | practicably implemented by the director of the department of environmental management |
21 | pursuant to subsection (c) of this section, nontoxic ammunition, as certified by the department, |
22 | shall be required when taking all wildlife, including game mammals, game birds, nongame birds, |
23 | and nongame mammals, with any firearm. |
24 | (1) The director shall maintain, by regulation, a public process to certify ammunition as |
25 | nontoxic ammunition, and shall define, by regulation, nontoxic ammunition as including only |
26 | ammunition in which there is no lead content, excluding the presence of trace elements of lead. |
27 | The director shall establish and annually update a list of certified ammunition. |
28 | (2) The list of certified ammunition shall include, but not be limited to, any federally |
29 | approved nontoxic shotgun ammunition. |
30 | (3) The director shall promulgate regulations phasing in the requirements of this section |
31 | by July 1, 2016. The requirements of this section shall be fully implemented statewide by no later |
32 | than July 1, 2020. If any of the requirements of this section can be implemented practicably, in |
33 | whole or in part, in advance of July 1, 2020, the director shall implement those requirements. The |
34 | director shall not reduce or eliminate any existing regulatory restrictions on the use of lead |
| LC001343 - Page 2 of 4 |
1 | ammunition until the additional requirements for use of nontoxic ammunition as required by this |
2 | section are implemented. |
3 | (4) In the event that no nontoxic ammunition is commercially available for a specific and |
4 | lawful hunting purpose due to the operation of the federal prohibitions relating to armor piercing |
5 | ammunition in Chapter 44 of Title 18 of the United States Code, the requirement for use of |
6 | nontoxic ammunition shall be suspended for that specific hunting purpose until such time as any |
7 | nontoxic ammunition becomes commercially available, at which point the suspension of the |
8 | nontoxic requirement shall automatically expire. For the purposes of this section "commercially |
9 | available" means offered for sale in a given location, including, but not limited to, online or over- |
10 | the-counter in a retail store. |
11 | (5) A person who is convicted of a violation of any provision of this section shall be |
12 | guilty of a misdemeanor and fined five hundred dollars ($500). A second or subsequent offense |
13 | shall be punishable by a fine of not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000) nor more than five |
14 | thousand dollars ($5,000). |
15 | (6) This section does not apply to government officials or their agents when carrying out |
16 | a statutory duty required by law. |
17 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
======== | |
LC001343 | |
======== | |
| LC001343 - Page 3 of 4 |
EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
AN ACT RELATING TO FISH AND WILDLIFE -- HUNTING--LEAD SHOT PROHIBITION | |
*** | |
1 | This act would create a general prohibition on the use of lead shot for hunting. |
2 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
======== | |
LC001343 | |
======== | |
| LC001343 - Page 4 of 4 |