Like many Arkansans, my introduction to firearms and shooting sports came through family. I still value those memories today, many years after my father’s impassioned lessons on gun safety or the occasion when he let us handle a prized antique flintlock.
We are blessed. The Natural State offers endless opportunities to enjoy the outdoors and especially shooting sports, hunting and fishing. It is important to me to serve as a good steward of the resources and traditions that Arkansas proudly offers.
In Congress, I’m honored to serve as a co-chair of the Congressional Sportsmen’s Caucus and work with over 200 colleagues from communities coast-to-coast advocating policies that protect and enhance our constituents’ ability to enjoy the outdoors and pass that same passion down to their children.
Historically we’ve had tremendous success.
Just last Congress, I helped lead a bill to create an electronic Federal Duck Stamp. We got it passed and signed into law with bipartisan approval, and being an active member of the Sportsmen’s Caucus was an important asset, providing a solid base of support that helped generate more momentum.
Arkansas is the duck hunting capital of the world. The Duck Stamp Modernization Act makes waterfowl hunting more accessible, decreasing barriers to compliance and increasing revenue for conservation by allowing use of an electronic duck stamp on a smart phone to meet the requirement to purchase a Federal Duck Stamp and carry it while in the field.
Hunters and anglers also deserve the opportunity to recreate on public lands. Yet several federal agencies have recently attempted to inhibit them by proposing a ban on the use of lead ammunition or tackle at these sites. Such a restriction is unreasonable absent clear evidence of a decline in wildlife population being primarily caused by using lead in ammunition or tackle.