Hey folks,
Here are 2 papers with WWW.SCOPEny.org's position on the Micro-Stamp and Ammo Encoding. Please use them to their fullest advantages.
Ammo Encode
Micro-Stamp
Regards BPB
Opinion's are free~MuzzleLoaders, Ammo,Longarms & Reloading supplies are for sale. 35+ year FFL Veteran Owned Transfers's
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Sunday, February 22, 2009
Tea Party Repeal the SPENDING ACT of 2009
Historic Boston Tea Party,
Send a tea bag in an envelope, to the oval office,your Congressman or Senator to arrive on April 1st, 2009.
A stamp is a small price to pay to show your outrage over the plan.
Put a reminder on your cell phone, PDA or puter!!
Rick Santelli Rant against bailout
http://www.calculatedriskblog.com/2009/02/rick-santelli-chicago-tea-party-in-july.html
"Tea Party" info
Click here: Rick Santelli’s Chicago Tea Party
Now if you are thinking like I am, that homeland stupidity will show up at your door for placing a teabag in an envelope, then use this picture of an original tea stamp.
Send a tea bag in an envelope, to the oval office,your Congressman or Senator to arrive on April 1st, 2009.
A stamp is a small price to pay to show your outrage over the plan.
Put a reminder on your cell phone, PDA or puter!!
Rick Santelli Rant against bailout
http://www.calculatedriskblog.com/2009/02/rick-santelli-chicago-tea-party-in-july.html
"Tea Party" info
Click here: Rick Santelli’s Chicago Tea Party
Now if you are thinking like I am, that homeland stupidity will show up at your door for placing a teabag in an envelope, then use this picture of an original tea stamp.
Print it out stuff it in an envelope and mail away!
Here is another stamp that gets our message across.
Governments spending has gotten out of hand. Especially when those of us who work have to endure sarcastic and job threatening comments from upper management.
Comments from some of the very people that will still be able to retire and collect large sums of cash till the day they die!
Regards BPB
Friday, February 20, 2009
Austin gun Rights Examiner
Another Brady hallucination: More guns, more ‘gun violence’ (Part 1)
Another-Brady-hallucination
recent USA Today article discussed pending legislation on the open carrying of holstered handguns. It also afforded the Brady Campaign’s president an opportunity to display his knowledge of the situation:
Says Paul Helmke, president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, which opposes open-carry laws: "We don't want more people carrying guns either openly or concealed because the more guns you have in a situation, the more likely you are to get gun violence." [Emphasis added]
The following series examines various government datasets to test Helmke’s “more guns, more violence” theory.
Examining the 2007 Brady report card
February 15, 4:54 PM
by Howard Nemerov, Austin Gun Rights Examiner Part 1
Another Brady hallucination Part 2
In part 1, we cross-referenced 2007 FBI crime data and Brady report card scores, and found that the higher the Brady grade––more “common sense gun restrictions” according to Brady––the higher the murder and violent crime rates.
While this correlation impacts Brady’s credibility as a reputable source for policy advice, the FBI data cited does not directly correlate gun prevalence to violent crime rates. Fortunately, there is a dataset cited by Brady which addresses this issue.
February 19, 9:43 AM
by Howard Nemerov, Austin Gun Rights Examiner
Another-Brady-hallucination
recent USA Today article discussed pending legislation on the open carrying of holstered handguns. It also afforded the Brady Campaign’s president an opportunity to display his knowledge of the situation:
Says Paul Helmke, president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, which opposes open-carry laws: "We don't want more people carrying guns either openly or concealed because the more guns you have in a situation, the more likely you are to get gun violence." [Emphasis added]
The following series examines various government datasets to test Helmke’s “more guns, more violence” theory.
Examining the 2007 Brady report card
February 15, 4:54 PM
by Howard Nemerov, Austin Gun Rights Examiner Part 1
Another Brady hallucination Part 2
In part 1, we cross-referenced 2007 FBI crime data and Brady report card scores, and found that the higher the Brady grade––more “common sense gun restrictions” according to Brady––the higher the murder and violent crime rates.
While this correlation impacts Brady’s credibility as a reputable source for policy advice, the FBI data cited does not directly correlate gun prevalence to violent crime rates. Fortunately, there is a dataset cited by Brady which addresses this issue.
February 19, 9:43 AM
by Howard Nemerov, Austin Gun Rights Examiner
2007-2008 Expenditures for the Conservation Fund (main account)
I have 3 new files from the DEC , one is a slide presentation and I'll upload that tomorrow on my blog. BPB
OK, as I told ya last night here are the files. You'll notice the text below is one of them.
2007 2008 Conservation Fund expenses.pdf
CF Expenditures
Conservation Fund 2007.ppt presentation
2007-2008 Expenditures for the Conservation Fund (main account)
Expenses
Division of Law Enforcement
Environmental Conservation Officer staff costs $14,967,915.61
Law Enforcement Dispatchers $21,825.14
Environmental Conservation Officers Academy $161,130.02
Environmental Conservation Officers supplies and contracts $942,414.60
Division of Fish, Wildlife and Marine Resources
Division-wide
DFWMR staff costs $20,723,804.21
Director's office travel, supplies, contracts $43,779.23
DECALS contract $1,800,000.00
Promote, administer and sell sporting licenses and habitat stamp $28,294.00
Issue deer management permits (outside of DECALS) $23.73
Expenditures for Conservation Fund Advisory Board members and meetings $20,806.50
Fish and Wildlife Management Board meetings $35,672.64
Bureau of Fish and Wildlife Services
DFWMR-wide vehicle charges, Central office supplies $497,472.15
Administer and sell special licenses $16,646.46
Investigation of wildlife mortality, pathology of wildlife anomalies $64,269.13
Operation and maintenance of Wildlife Resources Center $19,895.78
Bureau of Fisheries
Central Office oversight for fisheries program; statewide fisheries vehicle costs; fish pathology contract $474,566.04
Central Office oversight for statewide habitat protection programs $52,465.01
Central Office oversight for statewide wildlife programs $379,726.50
Control of sea lamprey in Lake Champlain $329.16
Coordination and administration of Great Lakes fisheries programs $6,589.79
Coordination and administration of statewide coldwater fisheries programs $8,739.09
Coordination and administration of statewide inland fisheries programs $7,540.83
Coordination and administration of statewide warmwater / coolwater fisheries programs $3,688.49
I FISH NY; fishing brochures; production of fishing regulations guide $127,588.01
Rearing and distribution of hatchery fish; operation of fish hatcheries $1,494,878.47
Supplies, materials, travel and equipment for Regional Fisheries staff $215,851.36
Temporary Service for Bureau of Fisheries $327,245.82
Travel and supplies for Salmon River Coordinator $3,887.51
Bureau of Habitat
Assistance with toxicants in fish tissue project $6,225.43
Development of watershed-based fisheries, wildlife, and habitat management efforts $16,799.61
Maintenance of Hale Creek Field Station and Central Office oversight of habitat protection programs $152,989.52
Supplies, materials, travel and equipment for Regional staff efforts - stream and wetland protection $33,053.47
Bureau of Wildlife
Bureau of Wildlife fiscal management; oversight for Habitat Inventory Unit $48,264.86
Central office oversight for wildlife program $35,119.09
Construction of new access sites $574.58
Monitoring and restoration of endangered species - Region 6 $9,266.17
Rearing and distribution of pheasants; operation of Reynolds Game Farm $252,175.16
State funds used to match North American Wetlands Conservation Act (NAWCA) projects $20,576.11
Statewide coordination of game bird, game mammal, and nuisance wildlife programs $292,341.37
Statewide coordination of non-game wildlife programs $76,941.37
Supplies, materials, travel and equipment for Regional Wildlife staff $217,383.74
Surveillance of deer for presence of chronic wasting disease $1,052,753.43
Division of Operations
Division of Operaitons supplies, contracts, and travel in support of the fish and wildlife programs $1,897,299.94
Division of Operations - regional staff expenditures $962,619.17
Salaries for DEC's Bureau of Electronics staff $97,370.86
Other DEC support for fish, wildlife and marine resources programs
Salary and indirect for Regional Attorney $86,297.78
Contracts and supplies for Division of Information Systems $980,035.62
Salaries, contracts, supplies and travel for Division of Management and Budget staff $1,243,004.15
Salaries for staff in Division of Public Affairs and Education $254,776.35
Salaries for non-DFWMR regional staff $315,699.15
Return-A-Gift to Wildlife funded
Administer Project WILD $56,226.14
Development of reptiles and amphibians atlas $9,328.17
Development of updated breeding bird atlas $32,592.60
Natural Heritage program efforts to document and monitor rare species and communities $400,000.00
Management of Master Habitat Databank $14,828.12
TOTAL $51,011,587.24
OK, as I told ya last night here are the files. You'll notice the text below is one of them.
2007 2008 Conservation Fund expenses.pdf
CF Expenditures
Conservation Fund 2007.ppt presentation
2007-2008 Expenditures for the Conservation Fund (main account)
Expenses
Division of Law Enforcement
Environmental Conservation Officer staff costs $14,967,915.61
Law Enforcement Dispatchers $21,825.14
Environmental Conservation Officers Academy $161,130.02
Environmental Conservation Officers supplies and contracts $942,414.60
Division of Fish, Wildlife and Marine Resources
Division-wide
DFWMR staff costs $20,723,804.21
Director's office travel, supplies, contracts $43,779.23
DECALS contract $1,800,000.00
Promote, administer and sell sporting licenses and habitat stamp $28,294.00
Issue deer management permits (outside of DECALS) $23.73
Expenditures for Conservation Fund Advisory Board members and meetings $20,806.50
Fish and Wildlife Management Board meetings $35,672.64
Bureau of Fish and Wildlife Services
DFWMR-wide vehicle charges, Central office supplies $497,472.15
Administer and sell special licenses $16,646.46
Investigation of wildlife mortality, pathology of wildlife anomalies $64,269.13
Operation and maintenance of Wildlife Resources Center $19,895.78
Bureau of Fisheries
Central Office oversight for fisheries program; statewide fisheries vehicle costs; fish pathology contract $474,566.04
Central Office oversight for statewide habitat protection programs $52,465.01
Central Office oversight for statewide wildlife programs $379,726.50
Control of sea lamprey in Lake Champlain $329.16
Coordination and administration of Great Lakes fisheries programs $6,589.79
Coordination and administration of statewide coldwater fisheries programs $8,739.09
Coordination and administration of statewide inland fisheries programs $7,540.83
Coordination and administration of statewide warmwater / coolwater fisheries programs $3,688.49
I FISH NY; fishing brochures; production of fishing regulations guide $127,588.01
Rearing and distribution of hatchery fish; operation of fish hatcheries $1,494,878.47
Supplies, materials, travel and equipment for Regional Fisheries staff $215,851.36
Temporary Service for Bureau of Fisheries $327,245.82
Travel and supplies for Salmon River Coordinator $3,887.51
Bureau of Habitat
Assistance with toxicants in fish tissue project $6,225.43
Development of watershed-based fisheries, wildlife, and habitat management efforts $16,799.61
Maintenance of Hale Creek Field Station and Central Office oversight of habitat protection programs $152,989.52
Supplies, materials, travel and equipment for Regional staff efforts - stream and wetland protection $33,053.47
Bureau of Wildlife
Bureau of Wildlife fiscal management; oversight for Habitat Inventory Unit $48,264.86
Central office oversight for wildlife program $35,119.09
Construction of new access sites $574.58
Monitoring and restoration of endangered species - Region 6 $9,266.17
Rearing and distribution of pheasants; operation of Reynolds Game Farm $252,175.16
State funds used to match North American Wetlands Conservation Act (NAWCA) projects $20,576.11
Statewide coordination of game bird, game mammal, and nuisance wildlife programs $292,341.37
Statewide coordination of non-game wildlife programs $76,941.37
Supplies, materials, travel and equipment for Regional Wildlife staff $217,383.74
Surveillance of deer for presence of chronic wasting disease $1,052,753.43
Division of Operations
Division of Operaitons supplies, contracts, and travel in support of the fish and wildlife programs $1,897,299.94
Division of Operations - regional staff expenditures $962,619.17
Salaries for DEC's Bureau of Electronics staff $97,370.86
Other DEC support for fish, wildlife and marine resources programs
Salary and indirect for Regional Attorney $86,297.78
Contracts and supplies for Division of Information Systems $980,035.62
Salaries, contracts, supplies and travel for Division of Management and Budget staff $1,243,004.15
Salaries for staff in Division of Public Affairs and Education $254,776.35
Salaries for non-DFWMR regional staff $315,699.15
Return-A-Gift to Wildlife funded
Administer Project WILD $56,226.14
Development of reptiles and amphibians atlas $9,328.17
Development of updated breeding bird atlas $32,592.60
Natural Heritage program efforts to document and monitor rare species and communities $400,000.00
Management of Master Habitat Databank $14,828.12
TOTAL $51,011,587.24
This cyber copy made possible by BlackPowderBill
Monday, February 16, 2009
Combined Ballistic Identification System (CoBIS)
Given the state deficit for 2009, and proposed deficits for several years out, repeal of the Combined Ballistic Identification System (CoBIS) is in order. It is too costly, has not provided the results that anti-gun groups said it would within the allotted time frame, and, in fact, has provided not even one prosecution for any crime under its provisions.
It has cost NYS taxpayers over $30 million in the time it has been on the books. Maryland State Police, who have a similar program, have called for its dismantling, as the cost could provide better benefits if used in other policing efforts. In addition, California’s former Attorney General, Democrat Bill Lockyer, after a study on nearly identical legislation in that state, declared such a program not technologically feasible. For more info on CoBIS see: CoBIS Report
Therefore, we, the undersigned, request that CoBIS be repealed, that the money thus applied be put back into the treasury, and used to offset the new bill(s) to force a renewable Pistol Permit, and fees associated with it, including fees to offset the state’s deficit in any given year.
Since it is known that such does not benefit the individual citizen, and in fact may cause undue hardship, including the loss of right due to the inability of many poor people to keep their permits based on these fees, thus leaving them more vulnerable to crime, and criminals, we ask that no bill be signed into law by the current governor, David Paterson, nor any future governors.
Name (please print)
Address
City, State
Signature
It has cost NYS taxpayers over $30 million in the time it has been on the books. Maryland State Police, who have a similar program, have called for its dismantling, as the cost could provide better benefits if used in other policing efforts. In addition, California’s former Attorney General, Democrat Bill Lockyer, after a study on nearly identical legislation in that state, declared such a program not technologically feasible. For more info on CoBIS see: CoBIS Report
Therefore, we, the undersigned, request that CoBIS be repealed, that the money thus applied be put back into the treasury, and used to offset the new bill(s) to force a renewable Pistol Permit, and fees associated with it, including fees to offset the state’s deficit in any given year.
Since it is known that such does not benefit the individual citizen, and in fact may cause undue hardship, including the loss of right due to the inability of many poor people to keep their permits based on these fees, thus leaving them more vulnerable to crime, and criminals, we ask that no bill be signed into law by the current governor, David Paterson, nor any future governors.
Name (please print)
Address
City, State
Signature
Saturday, February 14, 2009
SCOPE Legislative Report
The SCOPE Legislative Report has been updated and is available at
http://scopeny.org/ARCHIVES/SCOPE_Legislative_Report.pdf
New information is in red and bills that will most likely advance are highlighted in yellow. Please check the link often as we update it several times a week.
Ken Mathison, President
SCOPE, Inc.
http://scopeny.org/ARCHIVES/SCOPE_Legislative_Report.pdf
New information is in red and bills that will most likely advance are highlighted in yellow. Please check the link often as we update it several times a week.
Ken Mathison, President
SCOPE, Inc.
Friday, February 13, 2009
Update License Fee increase
Here is the CFAB Proposal
CFAB Proposal
Fall Sportsmen's Association meeting with the Commissioner
Fall Sportsmen's Association meeting with the Commissioner
Meeting of Feb. 11, 2008
Sportsmen's Briefing comm. Grannis 3.6m file
Sent: Friday, February 13, 2009 11:15 AM
To: NYSCCpresident
Subject: Update License Fee increase
Hello All
DEC has provided a breakdown of the expenses of the Conservation Fund. The report uses program names that would be confusing, so I have asked that it be changed so that the average person can read the report. When the report is worded differently, DEC will put it on their website and I will notify everyone about how to view it. Hopefully this will be done before the license fee increase proposal becomes an Assembly bill, so that you can see it before I ask you to support the fee increase.
Attached is the license fee increase that was prepared and approved by CFAB.
The CFAB figures reflect the need to cover the whole deficit and make the fund solvent for at least three years. These figures are without trout or pheasant stamps or any revenue from the Recreational Marine Fishing License (RMFL). At this time the Governor's bill has not changed; without a change that would place all of the funds from a Recreational Marine Fishing License into a separate marine account, it does not look like the RMFL will get support from those legislators from Long Island and New York City.
However, if the amendments to the Recreational Marine Fishing License bill do not include money for the Conservation Fund to cover the costs of implementing the license, I will have a problem with that, as the money we spend on hunting, fishing and trapping licenses should not be spent to implement the marine license. We should not support this without any reimbursement to the Conservation Fund, for expenses.
The proposed changes by those from Long Island and New York City have put a stop to the possibility of a combo license, which would have avoided the cost of two separate licenses for those individuals who fish both types of waters. The Recreational Marine Fishing License will be needed to fish the Hudson and Delaware Rivers and their tributaries for striped bass, shad and herring up to the first dams that prevent the fish from going futher upstream.
With the license fee increase proposal in place, I have asked Commissioner Grannis to make sure that the Trout and Salmon stamp in the Governor's bill be pulled. Commissioner Grannis said it would be.
Additionally, with the license fee increase proposal in place, we have withdrawn our proposal for a pheasant stamp.
To clear up some issues that I have received comments about:
~ the highest-ranking DEC people that are paid from the Conservation Fund are the Department heads, for instance, John Major. No one from the Governor's office is paid from the Conservation Fund.
~ The Conservation Fund went through a Federal Audit in 2006.
~ When figuring increases, only those licenses for legal hunting implements, seasons, etc. could be figured in.
~ I received a lot of comments about stamps. Maybe we should change the laws so that the stamps we already have would be considered licenses or permits. The stamps we already have are bowhunting, muzzleloader, duck, habitat/access.
~ I do have to agree that if they implement a trout stamp, next it would be walleye, then musky, bass, pan fish or anything else to raise money; and there was no guarantee that enough money would have been generated to run the fish hatcheries, or even the pheasant program.
~ The reason the NYSCC took a position in early January to support the stamps was to show the Governor that we were serious about saving the pheasant program, when I had been told by the Governor's staff person that they would not talk about a license fee increase. Later, after the Governor stated that sportsmen would work with DEC to come up with funding to make the Conservation Fund solvent to keep the pheasant program going in the future, I felt that stamps would not bring in the needed money and the only way to assure enough revenue was to work on a license fee increase, which Commissioner Grannis agreed to have his staff work on, with CFAB and the sportsmen.
Thank you.
Harold L. Palmer
President
New York State Conservation Council, Inc.
CFAB Proposal
Fall Sportsmen's Association meeting with the Commissioner
Fall Sportsmen's Association meeting with the Commissioner
Meeting of Feb. 11, 2008
Sportsmen's Briefing comm. Grannis 3.6m file
Sent: Friday, February 13, 2009 11:15 AM
To: NYSCCpresident
Subject: Update License Fee increase
Hello All
DEC has provided a breakdown of the expenses of the Conservation Fund. The report uses program names that would be confusing, so I have asked that it be changed so that the average person can read the report. When the report is worded differently, DEC will put it on their website and I will notify everyone about how to view it. Hopefully this will be done before the license fee increase proposal becomes an Assembly bill, so that you can see it before I ask you to support the fee increase.
Attached is the license fee increase that was prepared and approved by CFAB.
The CFAB figures reflect the need to cover the whole deficit and make the fund solvent for at least three years. These figures are without trout or pheasant stamps or any revenue from the Recreational Marine Fishing License (RMFL). At this time the Governor's bill has not changed; without a change that would place all of the funds from a Recreational Marine Fishing License into a separate marine account, it does not look like the RMFL will get support from those legislators from Long Island and New York City.
However, if the amendments to the Recreational Marine Fishing License bill do not include money for the Conservation Fund to cover the costs of implementing the license, I will have a problem with that, as the money we spend on hunting, fishing and trapping licenses should not be spent to implement the marine license. We should not support this without any reimbursement to the Conservation Fund, for expenses.
The proposed changes by those from Long Island and New York City have put a stop to the possibility of a combo license, which would have avoided the cost of two separate licenses for those individuals who fish both types of waters. The Recreational Marine Fishing License will be needed to fish the Hudson and Delaware Rivers and their tributaries for striped bass, shad and herring up to the first dams that prevent the fish from going futher upstream.
With the license fee increase proposal in place, I have asked Commissioner Grannis to make sure that the Trout and Salmon stamp in the Governor's bill be pulled. Commissioner Grannis said it would be.
Additionally, with the license fee increase proposal in place, we have withdrawn our proposal for a pheasant stamp.
To clear up some issues that I have received comments about:
~ the highest-ranking DEC people that are paid from the Conservation Fund are the Department heads, for instance, John Major. No one from the Governor's office is paid from the Conservation Fund.
~ The Conservation Fund went through a Federal Audit in 2006.
~ When figuring increases, only those licenses for legal hunting implements, seasons, etc. could be figured in.
~ I received a lot of comments about stamps. Maybe we should change the laws so that the stamps we already have would be considered licenses or permits. The stamps we already have are bowhunting, muzzleloader, duck, habitat/access.
~ I do have to agree that if they implement a trout stamp, next it would be walleye, then musky, bass, pan fish or anything else to raise money; and there was no guarantee that enough money would have been generated to run the fish hatcheries, or even the pheasant program.
~ The reason the NYSCC took a position in early January to support the stamps was to show the Governor that we were serious about saving the pheasant program, when I had been told by the Governor's staff person that they would not talk about a license fee increase. Later, after the Governor stated that sportsmen would work with DEC to come up with funding to make the Conservation Fund solvent to keep the pheasant program going in the future, I felt that stamps would not bring in the needed money and the only way to assure enough revenue was to work on a license fee increase, which Commissioner Grannis agreed to have his staff work on, with CFAB and the sportsmen.
Thank you.
Harold L. Palmer
President
New York State Conservation Council, Inc.
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