DEER & ELK FEEDING: SUNSET S.B. 926: ENROLLED ANALYSIS
Senate Bill 926 (as enrolled) PUBLIC ACT 537 of 2004
Sponsor: Senator Michelle A. McManus
Senate Committee: Natural Resources and Environmental Affairs
House Committee: Conservation and Outdoor Recreation
Date Completed: 3-29-05
RATIONALE
Bovine tuberculosis (TB) is a contagious disease capable of infecting most warm-blooded animals, but commonly affects cattle, bison, deer, and elk. It is primarily spread by close contact and is intensified by confined or crowded conditions. Several years ago, northeastern Michigan was thought to be the only place on the continent where the disease had become established in the wild deer population. Some believe that the presence of the disease is due, in part, to individuals' supplying supplemental food to the deer for hunting or viewing purposes. This practice usually involves scattering food on the ground to lure deer or elk into closer proximity to humans. Because supplemental feeding draws herds of animals into nose-to-nose contact, it contributes to the spread of bovine TB and other contagious diseases.
A new contagious disease affecting deer and elk hovers at one of Michigan's borders. Chronic Wasting Disease, or CWD, has been reported in Wisconsin, as well as in 14 other states and the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. This fatal neurological disease is closely related to Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE, or "mad cow" in cattle) and Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease in humans. While the route of infection for CWD is unknown, there is strong evidence that it is transmitted via saliva, urine, and feces, either from animal to animal or from soil or surface to animal. It is believed that supplemental feeding provides conditions favorable to the spread of CWD.
Public Act 66 of 199 added Section 40111a to the Natural Resources and Environmental Protection Act (NREPA) to require the Commission of Agriculture to issue an order regulating deer and elk feeding. The section was scheduled to sunset on December 31, 2004. Because of the continuing threat of bovine TB and the new threat of CWD, it was suggested that this expiration date be postponed.
CONTENT
The bill amended Part 401 (Wildlife Conservation) of NREPA to extend until 2010 a section that required the Natural Resources Commission to issue an order, effective October 1, 1999, prohibiting deer or elk feeding, unless it is for recreational viewing purposes. Section 40111a was scheduled to sunset on December 31, 2004. The bill delays the repeal until January 1, 2010.
Under this section, the Commission had to issue the required order by September 1, 1999. In addition to prohibiting deer or elk feeding except for recreational viewing purposes, the order must require that food distributed for recreational viewing be placed within 100 yards of the residence of the person engaged in recreational viewing on land owned or possessed by that person.
Section 40111a also permits the Commission to issue an order prohibiting all deer and elk feeding in all or part of the State if the Commission considers the prohibition necessary to manage wildlife
populations properly or to control or eradicate disease.
The section specifies that an order issued under Part 401 concerning baiting to take deer or elk or concerning deer or elk feeding may not distinguish between depositing or distributing feed by hand and depositing or distributing feed by a mechanical device.
MCL 324.40111a & 324.42702
ARGUMENTS
(Please note: The arguments contained in this analysis originate from sources outside the Senate Fiscal Agency. The Senate Fiscal Agency neither supports nor opposes legislation.)
Supporting Argument
When Section 40111a was enacted, the State recognized that bovine TB presents a risk to humans, livestock, deer, and other wildlife. In March 1999, the Natural Resources Commission and the Agriculture Commission had adopted resolutions calling for a statewide ban on supplemental feeding of wild free-ranging deer and elk. The resolutions provided that supplemental feeding is not a scientifically or biologically supported resource management practice and that it had inflated the deer and elk population, resulting in the segregation of habitat; negatively affected the environment and ecosystem; and increased opportunities for the spread of bovine TB.
The presence of CWD would pose similar problems. In February 2003, Governor Granholm commissioned a task force to study the threat of CWD to Michigan cervids (e.g., deer and elk) and to make recommendations to address it. According to the Chronic Wasting Disease Task Force's Final Report, issued in October 2003, "The potential for the spread of disease increases when animals congregate around unnatural (i.e., baiting/feeding) sources of feed." The Task Force Report concluded that CWD's spread to Michigan would be a "major disaster" for the State's wild cervid populations and agricultural enterprises. Widespread CWD could significantly reduce the deer and elk population, which would reduce hunting and adversely affect Michigan's economy. Also, monitoring and controlling CWD would be extremely costly and divert funding from the DNR, the Michigan Department of Agriculture, and the farm community.
In light of the hazards these two contagious diseases present, it is important that the State continue to regulate how, when, and whether supplemental feeding is permitted.
Legislative Analyst: J.P. Finet
Claire Layman
FISCAL IMPACT
The bill will have no fiscal impact on State or local government.
Fiscal Analyst: Jessica RunnelsAnalysis was prepared by nonpartisan Senate staff for use by the Senate in its deliberations and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent. sb926/0304