SENATE, No. 335

STATE OF NEW JERSEY

219th LEGISLATURE

 

PRE-FILED FOR INTRODUCTION IN THE 2020 SESSION

 


 

Sponsored by:

Senator  BOB SMITH

District 17 (Middlesex and Somerset)

Senator  STEVEN V. OROHO

District 24 (Morris, Sussex and Warren)

 

 

 

 

SYNOPSIS

     Permits certain deer control activities; establishes check-off donation on hunting license applications to support venison donation program; authorizes issuance of multi-species depredation permit for wildlife control on farmland.

 

CURRENT VERSION OF TEXT

     Introduced Pending Technical Review by Legislative Counsel.

  


An Act concerning deer and other animals, amending P.L.1997, c.123, P.L.1997, c.268, P.L.1997, c.424, and R.S.23:4-42, and supplementing Title 23 of the Revised Statutes.

 

     Be It Enacted by the Senate and General Assembly of the State of New Jersey:

 

     1.    Section 1 of P.L.1997, c.424 (C.23:4-24.4) is amended to read as follows:

     1.    a.  Notwithstanding the provisions of section 1 and section 2 of P.L.1970, c.180 (C.23:4-24.2 and C.23:4-24.3) [, a person may] to the contrary, the Fish and Game Council may authorize a hunter to: (1) use bait , for the purposes of hunting, to attract, entice, or lure a deer; [and] (2) kill, destroy, injure, shoot, shoot at, take, wound, or attempt to take, kill, or wound, a deer, or have in possession or control any firearm or other weapon of any kind for such purposes, within any distance of a baited area [.  A person may] ; and (3) be elevated , when using a baited area, in a standing tree or [in a] structure of any kind [when using a baited area for hunting deer, and the baited area may be within any distance of the standing tree or structure] , which lies within any distance of the baited area.

     b.    For the purposes of this section, “baited area” means [the presence of placed, exposed, deposited, distributed, or scattered] an area wherein agricultural products, salt, or any other edible lure [whatsoever] capable of attracting, enticing, or luring deer is placed, exposed, deposited, distributed, or scattered for the purposes of hunting; and “hunter” means any person who has obtained from the Division of Fish and Wildlife: (1) a license or permit to hunt deer, or (2) a permit, issued pursuant to section 4 of P.L.2000, c.46 (C.23:4-42.6), to engage in alternative control methods that have been approved by the division for use in a community based deer management plan.

     c.     The Fish and Game Council shall adopt, pursuant to the “Administrative Procedure Act,” P.L.1968, c.410 (C.52:14B-1 et seq.), rules and regulations as may be necessary to effectuate the provisions of this section.

(cf: P.L.1999, c.231, s.1)

 

     2.    R.S.23:4-42 is amended to read as follows:

     23:4-42.  a.  Except as provided in subsection b. of this section, no person shall hunt for, pursue, shoot at, take, kill, wound or attempt to take, kill or wound a deer of any description prohibited by the provisions of the State Fish and Game Code, or hunt for, pursue, shoot at, take, kill, wound or attempt to take, kill or wound any wild deer at any time except during the period permitted by the State Fish and Game Code, or kill in any one year more than the number of deer permitted by the State Fish and Game Code.

      b.   [The] (1) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection a. of this section or any other law, rule, or regulation to the contrary, it shall be lawful for the owner or lessee of [any] land [, a portion of which is] consisting, in part, of forested ground or land under cultivation, who has on their person a written permit issued by the division; or for the authorized [agents] agent [of the owner or lessee having] thereof, who has on their person a written permit issued by the division and countersigned by the owner or lessee , [may] to kill any deer that [may be] is found on [that land] the forested ground or land under cultivation, as the case may be, during the period covered by the permit.

     (2)   As a condition precedent to issuing a permit to an owner or lessee of land under cultivation under this subsection, the division may require the owner or lessee of the land to provide evidence that deer damage has occurred on the land under cultivation within the preceding 12 months.

      As a condition precedent to issuing a permit to an owner or lessee of forested ground under this subsection, the division may require the owner or lessee of the forested ground to submit evidence from a forester that the nature and extent of deer damage within the preceding 12 months interferes with the goals of the woodland management plan, forest management plan, or forest stewardship plan.

     (3)   If so requested by the owner or lessee of the land, the period covered by the permit issued under this subsection to the owner or lessee of the land, or to the authorized agent thereof, shall [also] include the entire months of February and March.

     (4)   The carcass of a deer that is killed [under such] in accordance with a permit issued by the division pursuant to this subsection, shall become the property of the division and may be removed and disposed of in the manner it directs unless the carcass cannot be located after a good faith effort, as defined by the State Fish and Game Code.

     (5)   For the purpose of this [section] subsection, “land under cultivation” [shall mean (1)] means (a) pasture fields that are seeded with cultivated grass or that have been so seeded within the prior 12 months, or [(2)] (b) land on which planted crops are growing or were growing within the prior 12 months [.  The division may require the owner or lessee of the land to provide evidence of deer damage within the prior 12 months as a condition of issuing a permit pursuant to this subsection] ; and “forested ground” means land that is the subject of a woodland management plan prepared and implemented pursuant to section 3 of P.L.1964, c.48 (C.54:4-23.3), a forest management plan that meets standards adopted by the Natural Resources Conservation Service of the United States Department of Agriculture, or a forest stewardship plan, which has been approved by the department in accordance with section 3 of P.L.2009, c.256 (C.13:1L-31).

(cf: P.L.1999, c.327, s.1)

 

     3.    Section 1 of P.L.1997, c.123 (C.23:4-42.1) is amended to read as follows:

     1.    Notwithstanding the provisions of R.S.23:4-45 or any other law, rule, regulation, or provision of the State Fish and Game Code to the contrary, whenever , pursuant to R.S.23:4-42, a permit is issued [by the State] to [a person] an owner or lessee of land, or the authorized agent thereof, to kill deer causing [crop] damage on forested ground or on land under cultivation [pursuant to R.S.23:4-42] , it shall be lawful for the [permittee or authorized agent thereof] permit holder, for the purposes authorized by the permit , and only while on the [land or lands] forested ground or land under cultivation , which [are owned or leased by that permittee] is the subject of the permit, but not on or along any adjacent public highway [adjacent thereto, and for which the permit is issued] , to:

     a.     Kill either sex deer at any time of day or night, except that the Fish and Game Council may impose such restrictions thereon as may be necessary to protect the general public;

     b.    Transport, possess, have in the [permittee’s or agent’s] permit holder’s control, or keep firearms authorized pursuant to R.S.23:4-44 uncased, unloaded, and outside the trunk while in or on a motor vehicle or any other kind of vehicle;

     c.     Utilize an illuminating device or devices, including but not limited to a spotlight, flashlight, floodlight, or headlight, whether portable or fixed to a motor vehicle or any other kind of vehicle, to locate and stun deer; and

     d.    Be assisted by the use of a driver for the motor vehicle or other kind of vehicle, and by a person or persons operating the illuminating device or devices, none of whom shall be required to possess a firearms purchaser identification card while providing such assistance.

(cf: P.L.1997, c.123, s.1)

 

     4.    Section 1 of P.L.1997, c.268 (C.23:4-42.7) is amended to read as follows:

     1.    a.  The Commissioner of Health [and Senior Services], in consultation with the Commissioner of Environmental Protection, the Secretary of Agriculture and the chairman of the Fish and Game Council, shall establish a venison donation program.  The program shall permit, under controlled conditions, the slaughter, processing, distribution, and serving of venison donated by recreational hunters to nonprofit charitable organizations, in accordance with guidelines established by the Commissioner of Health [and Senior Services] and the State Fish and Game Code established pursuant to section 32 of P.L.1948, c.448 (C.13:1B-30), in order to protect the health and safety of those persons consuming the donated venison.

     b.    The Commissioner of Health [and Senior Services], in consultation with the Commissioner of Environmental Protection, the Secretary of Agriculture, the chairman of the Fish and Game Council, and the United Bow Hunters of New Jersey, shall study the feasibility of expanding the program to include venison obtained from hunters [licensed] who have been issued a permit by the [Department of Environmental Protection] Division of Fish and Wildlife in the Department of Environmental Protection, pursuant to R.S.23:4-42, to participate in [crop] depredation control activities , or venison obtained as a result of the implementation of other methods to manage and control deer populations, including but not limited to those established by sections 1 through 4 of P.L.2000, c.46 (C.23:4-42.3 through C.23:4-42.6), and shall expand the program accordingly if the [commissioner] Commissioner of Health deems it appropriate.

(cf: P.L.2000, c.46, s.6)

 

     5.    (New section)  The owner or lessee of any land, a portion of which is land under cultivation, or the authorized agents of the owner or lessee, having on their person a written permit, to be known as a multi-species depredation permit, issued by the division and countersigned by the owner or lessee, may kill any animal of a species identified in the permit which is on the land and known to cause crop damage.  A multi-species depredation permit shall list all species to which the permit applies, as determined by the division, but in every case shall include deer, and shall not include the requirement to retrieve the carcass of any animal killed under the authority of the permit, except as otherwise prescribed for deer pursuant to paragraph (4) of subsection b. of R.S.23:4-42.  For the purpose of this section, "land under cultivation" means (1) pasture fields that are seeded with cultivated grass or that have been so seeded within the prior 12 months, or (2) land on which planted crops are growing or were growing within the prior 12 months.

 

     6.    (New section)  a.  There is hereby established within the “hunters’ and anglers’ license fund,” created pursuant to the provisions of R.S.23:3-11 and R.S.23:3-12, a special account to be known as the “Hunters Helping the Hungry Fund.”

     b.    The Division of Fish and Wildlife in the Department of Environmental Protection shall, on each new application or renewal application for a hunting license or permit, depredation control permit, or special deer management permit, or any other hunting or fishing license or permit issued by the division, provide the applicant with the opportunity to indicate thereon that an enclosed monetary contribution shall be deposited in the special account established by subsection a. of this section.  The division shall allow the applicant’s donation preference to be indicated on the license or permit application form in substantially the following way:

     Hunters Helping the Hungry Fund:  I wish to contribute $10, $20, other amount $..... to this fund.

     c.     Any costs incurred by the Department of Environmental Protection for the collection of funds or for the administration of the donation program under this section may be deducted from receipts collected pursuant to this section, as determined by the Director of the Division of Budget and Accounting.  The State Treasurer shall deposit net contributions collected pursuant to this section into the “Hunters Helping the Hungry Fund.”

     d.    The Legislature shall annually appropriate all funds deposited in the “Hunters Helping the Hungry Fund” to the Department of Environmental Protection for distribution to the nonprofit organization, Hunters Helping the Hungry, or to any other nonprofit organization that, as determined by the department, has a substantially similar purpose and mission.  The funds appropriated and distributed pursuant to this subsection shall be used by Hunters Helping the Hungry or by such other, similarly purposed, nonprofit organization, as the case may be, for the purposes of administering, maintaining, facilitating, and expanding the venison donation program that is overseen and managed thereby.

 

     7.    This act shall take effect on the 60th day following the date of enactment, but the Commissioner of Environmental Protection may take any anticipatory administrative action in advance thereof as may be necessary for the implementation of this act.

 

 

STATEMENT

 

     This bill would amend and supplement laws pertaining to hunting.  In particular, the bill would: (1) expand the laws relating to hunting to control animals that damage crops; (2) clarify the law pertaining to deer baiting; and (3) establish a uniform procedure by which monetary donations can be made by hunters to the non-profit organization Hunters Helping the Hungry.

     State law currently allows the Division of Fish and Wildlife in the Department of Environmental Protection to authorize a land owner or lessee, or the authorized agent thereof, through the issuance of a permit, to engage in deer depredation control activities only on land that is “under cultivation,” as defined by statute.  The bill would amend the relevant sections of law to additionally allow the division to authorize a land owner or lessee, or the authorized agent thereof, through the issuance of a permit, to engage in deer depredation control activities on forested land that is the subject of a forest stewardship plan, forest management plan, or woodland management plan.  The bill would authorize the Division of Fish and Wildlife to require the owner or lessee of land under cultivation to provide evidence that deer damage has occurred on the land under cultivation within the preceding 12 months; and the owner or lessee of forested land to submit evidence from a forester that the nature and extent of deer damage within the preceding 12 months interferes with the goals of the woodland management plan, forest management plan, or forest stewardship plan.

      The bill would also require the Division of Fish and Wildlife to establish a multi-species depredation permit which would allow an owner or lessee of land, a portion of which is under cultivation, or their authorized agents, to kill an animal of a species listed in the permit which is on the land and known to cause crop damage.

     The bill would establish within the State’s “hunters’ and anglers’ license fund,” a special account to be known as the “Hunters Helping the Hungry Fund.”  Hunters Helping the Hungry (HHH) is a nonprofit organization that works with regional food banks to provide hungry State residents with nutritious, high-protein venison meat, which has been donated to the organization by deer hunters.  Although, in 2001, HHH received a legislative grant of $95,000, and in 2003, obtained a $50,000 grant from the Division of Fish and Wildlife, since that time, the organization has relied upon private donations to effectuate its mission. 

     In order to support the venison donation program that is currently overseen and managed by this organization, and in order to encourage hunters to make the private monetary contributions needed to sustain such a program, the bill would require the Division of Fish and Wildlife, on each new application or renewal application for a recreational hunting license, depredation control permit, or special deer management permit, or on any other hunting or fishing license or permit issued thereby, to provide the applicant with the opportunity to indicate thereon, using a check-off style format, that the applicant wishes an enclosed monetary contribution to be donated to the “Hunters Helping the Hungry Fund.” 

     Although the bill would provide that any costs incurred by the DEP for the collection of funds or the administration of the donation program may be deducted from the receipts obtained from donations, the bill would require the remaining moneys to be deposited into the “Hunters Helping the Hungry Fund” and annually appropriated by the Legislature to the DEP, for distribution to HHH or to another nonprofit organization which, as determined by the department, has a substantially similar purpose and mission.  The bill would further require those distributed funds to be used by HHH or by such other, similarly purposed, nonprofit organization, as the case may be, for the purposes of administering, maintaining, facilitating, and expanding the venison donation program.