Politics & Government
PETA Unfazed by Michigan Ban on Drone Use by Hunters, Activists
PETA says "eyes in the sky" drones assist game wardens cracking down on illegal hunting, but lawmaker thinks offer to help is disingenuous.
Michigan became the fourth U.S. state to outlaw drone-assisted hunting with a ban that also prohibits the use of unmanned aerial vehicles to harass hunters and anglers. (Photo by Kevin Baird via Flickr/Creative Commons)
Michigan lawmakers have gotten in front of a 21st Century problem with twin bills that not only ban the use of drones by hunters and anglers to locate quarry, but also bar activists from using the airborne gizmos to harass them.
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To be clear, itβs not as though throngs of Michigan sportsmen and sportswomen are holing up in yacht cabins or spinning stories at the campsite while the unmanned aerial vehicles scope out where the fish are schooling and the big trophy bucks are foraging.
Neither have outdoors enthusiasts been bothered stealth drones whirring overhead, grabbing video footage and transmitting it to the smartphones of activists morally opposed to and intent on ending Michiganβs long tradition of hunting and fishing.
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But Public Acts 12 and 13 of 2015 arenβt exactly solutions in search of problems, either, said Sen. Phil Pavlov, R-St. Clair Township, sponsor of one of the bills.
Given the growing popularity and affordability of drones, βwe just wanted to make sure we were out ahead of any potential problems,β Pavlov told Patch.com.
Harassing Hunters and Gaming the Game
The bills, which Gov. Rick Snyder signed into law, address some of the same issues that prompted drone-assisted hunting bans in Colorado, Montana and Alaska, Pavlov said. Several other states are considering similar legislation.
βCertain groups are using drones to harass hunters,β Pavlov said, βand others are using drones to game the game system.β
Both activities are potentially harmful in Michigan, where hunting and fishing combine for a $4.7 billion annual economic impact, according to U.S. Fish & Wildlife Services estimates.
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Pavlov wasnβt willing to say one groupβs drone use is potentially worse than the otherβs, but he offered a stern warning at groups like People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals that βweβre not going to allow intimidation.β
PETA, the worldβs largest animal rights group, didnβt show up to lobby against the legislation β or any issue during his eight years on the Great Lakes Natural Resources Committee, Pavlov said.
But lawmakers are watching closely to see how the organization, known for extreme, attention-grabbing tactics, responds to laws that carry both monetary fines and jail time.
In general, a violation of either law is a misdemeanor punishable by up to 93 days in jail and a fine between $500-$1,000. Subsequent violations could mean up to a year in jail. If a drone is used to assist in hunting, fines vary according to the species hunted.
Drones Monitor βWho Is Doing What To Animalsβ
PETA is all for the ban on drone-assisted hunting, and generally a law that strips hunters of an unfair advantage would be cheered by the group.
But Michiganβs law also potentially limits a key PETA initiative, Kenneth Montville, a senior strategist and spokesman for the organization, told Patch.
Through its skywatch program, PETA is offering βAir Angel Dronesβ so citizens can conduct their own surveillance of hunting activities. About a dozen drones, first made available in October 2013 for about $325 each, sold in the first 24 hours of availability. Since then, a dozen or so more have sold.
Montville says PETAβs sole interest in using drones is to videotape βwho is doing what to animalsβ in a friendly, informal partnership that helps game and law enforcement officials crack down on the bad actors.
Drones in the sky also tip balance a bit more in animalsβ favor, he said.
βItβs never really been a fair chase, when youβre talking about hunters,β Montville said, reeling off a litany of tricked-up gear β high-powered rifles, scopes, ATVs, feeding tube fish lures and βand even camouflage toilet paperβ β used by hunters.
PETAβs legal team hasnβt had a chance to review the new Michigan laws, but Montville doesnβt expect the groupβs skywatch campaign to be grounded as a result.
Important, he said, is the Michigan lawβs provision that UAVs canβt be used to interfere with legal hunting activities. He reiterated that PETA only wants to call attention to illegal activities.
Pavlov isnβt swayed by the reassurances.
βI think itβs very extremeβ for PETA to claim that its drone activities are an innocuous offer of help, he said. βWe donβt want that activity in Michigan, and thatβs why we pursued legislation to prohibit it.β
Sen. Tom Casperson, R-Escanaba, shares Pavlovβs concern about anti-hunting activists. In a statement on his website, he said the law ensures βthose who routinely attack hunting are not able to harass or attack hunters for no reason other than to promote their own anti-hunting agendas.β
PETA: Hunting Not for Sustenance, But for Fun
As for that agenda, PETA is unabashedly unapologetic.
The organization morally opposes hunting as βcompletely unnecessary in 21st Century United States,β and believes that, βif left alone, animals will regulate their own numbers based on predator-prey relationships,β Montville said.
βHunting is cruel, and it disrupts migration and hibernation patterns and reproduction in animals that mate for life,β he said. βKilling off one doesnβt just kill off one. It kills off entire families, if not entire communities.β
Montville admitted mounting public pressure against hunting is an arduous task in a state that is economically dependent on recreational tourism and places high cultural value on the multi-generational tradition of hunting and fishing.
βThis legislation gives us a chance to talk about hunting in the open,β he said. βItβs a completely outmoded concept in the 21st Century and in a first-world country. Itβs not done for sustenance; itβs done for fun.
βUse the natural resources for hiking, camping and canoeing rather than sending the message that making animals suffer is fun.β
And in the meantime, poachers and others employing illegal hunting and fishing practices should consider themselves placed on notice, Montville said:
βOur eyes in the sky might be watching and reporting on your actions.β
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