Monday, 23 November 2015

Shades of Gray: Outdoor Writer Fired by Ducks Unlimited for Access Story

I'm an outdoor writer. While I’d like to describe my profession as journalism, I do not pretend to work with the same single-minded obligation to objectivity as those dirt-digging reporters for the New York Times or CNN.

I write about the outdoors, about hunting and fishing. I try to do so in a manner that represents the best interest of my audience, which depends on access to our shared wildlife resources in order to participate in the cherished activities of hunting and fishing. While I try to take a fair and honest approach to those topics, I have never tried to hide my bias, which tends toward promotion of public access, wildlife conservation, and celebration of our hunting lifestyle.

If I’m covering these topics correctly, I tend to make people a little uncomfortable from time to time.

In fact, one of the very first pieces I wrote for Outdoor Life's Open Country series dealt with public access to a trout stream in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. That piece led to a complaint from one of the well-heeled owners of that ground. Which led to an uncomfortable conversation with the editor of Outdoor Life.

I try to write about topics that matter to people like me in a way that they can relate to. I think I add value to those who employ me. But I also know it takes but one mistake, or torqueing just one influential person, to become suddenly unemployed.

But how do you know when you’ve crossed that line? In outdoor writing, sometimes things aren’t as cut-and-dried as they should be. Take the case of Don Thomas.

INTERSECTING INFLUENCES
Don Thomas is a Montana-based outdoor writer. He’s a longtime favorite of mine. In fact, it was his works, written under his byline of E. Donnall Thomas, Jr., that led me down the career path I've chosen. He is a terrific writer. And I say that about damn few people.

Thomas was a long-time contributor to Ducks Unlimited's magazine, and his words occupied one of the most coveted pieces of real estate in any outdoor magazine: the back page.

Note my use of the past-tense. Thomas no longer has that space. In fact, according to DU, he never even existed.

Why?

Because he wrote about a public-access issue and took to task an influential man named James Cox Kennedy. The story is both extremely simple and confoundingly complicated, but here’s the basis: Kennedy owns a sizable piece of real estate along Montana's Ruby Creek. In Montana, waterways are considered public property, and the public is welcome to access them at any legal access point. On Kennedy’s property is a public road and a public bridge which has provided public access to Ruby Creek for years.

Kennedy is trying to close that access. Thomas thinks it should remain open, and wrote about the issue—and showed his bias—in an article that ran in Outside Bozeman magazine. That article cost Thomas his gig with DU.

Turns out Kennedy is not an anti-hunter. He's an avid hunter and angler. He's also a big-time donor to Ducks Unlimited and has served on DU's board. Cox, who was once listed as the 59th wealthiest person in America by Forbes magazine, is the type of donor that conservation groups like DU can ill afford to alienate.

I get that better than most. I spent the better part of a decade working as the deputy director of Michigan United Conservation Clubs, a non-profit conservation group in Michigan. I faced the very same situation that DU faced: What is your allegiance to a donor when they may not behave in a manner that is in the best interests of the organization’s membership or mission?

I do not envy DU's position. They had to balance their obligation to a longtime contributor with the risk of alienating an important contributor. Nor do I necessarily find fault with Thomas. He was doing his job. He was reporting on a public-access issue of importance to folks who like to hunt and fish in Montana. After all, as we’ve noted here at Open Country many times, the loss of public access is a major reason for the decline in hunter and angler participation.

Those are powerful competing influences.

THE PROBLEMATIC GRAY AREA
Thomas claims he had no knowledge of Kennedy's relationship with DU. As a journalist, I find that hard to believe, but I also wonder if should have mattered?

To be fair, Thomas did seem to be personally attacking Kennedy in the Outside Bozeman story. As a journalist, that's something you simply cannot do.

But the facts of the issue have not been disputed: Kennedy is, indeed, taking legal action to close access to a public waterway.

Ducks Unlimited fired Thomas, and in a Stalin-esque move, wiped all references to him from its website and other content channels. DU editorial director Matt Young stated in a letter that, “We simply cannot condone this type of vitriol directed by one of our contributing editors toward a dedicated DU volunteer.”

On the surface, it's easy to say that DU is simply caving to the influence of a donor's cash and turning a blind eye to the fact that one of their donors is looking to shutter access to a public resource.

On the other hand, Ducks Unlimited isn't really in the access game. It's a habitat organization, and no one can make the argument that DU hasn't been the waterfowl hunter's best ally for a long, long time. Habitat costs big money, the very sort of big money that Cox brings to the game.

This is why I worry. There is so little black and white any more. Gray is the color of this game.

Don Thomas was doing his job, writing about an issue that should matter to his audience of hunters and anglers. Maybe he should have toned back the passion just a bit. But is it not that very passion that has made him so impactful in the first place?

Because of that he was fired, terminated by a group that we all agree is fueled, funded, and driven by hunters.

Don Thomas made the wrong person mad. I don't know that Kennedy actually complained to DU about the piece, but it doesn’t matter. The wrong words were written, the wrong person was slighted, and that was that.

I can't help but wonder if, given the chance to do it all over, would Thomas have done it differently, or covered the issue more gently?

And this is why I worry. Because if that question were asked of me, my response might be: Not a chance.

Video: Want to Kill Big Bucks? Stop Hunting Them

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It's the middle of Michigan's gun season and I'm frantically trying to catch up on work after spending a few days chasing the rut.

I hunted in South Dakota, Ohio, Kansas and Michigan. Killed two bucks – my best season ever thus far – but have not yet filled a home state tag.

The other morning, I was sitting in a stand and running through some e-mails. I know, I know. But work can only wait so long.

One of the e-mails was from a reader and his question was simple: What am I doing wrong?

My answer was probably not what he was expecting. But it was the truth.

I've been fortunate enough to kill a couple of pretty good bucks here in Michigan. Anyone (almost) can kill big bucks in places like Iowa, Kansas and Illinois. But tagging a stud in a heavily-hunted state like Michigan is a different task altogether.

I'm not famous or anything like that but I do get a fair number of people asking me for the “secret” to shooting old deer in places where few of them exist.

So I decided to take the opportunity while on stand with a video camera to record my standard response.

You may not like it. But it is what it is.

Fall Trout Tip: Fly Rodding with Jigs

A few years ago I was fishing a well-known trout tailwater with friends David, Bill and Terry. David had arranged the trip and preferred to fish with bait so we spent the first day bouncing shrimp off the bottom. Since we were raking in trout no one complained. 

By late morning of the second day I was getting a little twitchy and asked our guide, Lenny (four anglers, two boats, one guide per boat), what he liked to use when he fished an artificial.

“I’ll show you when we stop for lunch,” he said.

While the shore lunch of fried trout, fried potatoes and apple dump pie was being consumed at a rate to induce a food coma, Lenny called me aside.

“I like to use these,” he said, dropping a tiny jig into my hand. “You can fish ‘em under a bobber and a lot of people like to do it that way but I like to tight line ’em. Some guys don’t like to fish them because you have to use such light line. I like 2 pound (test). Four pound’s really too heavy but you can use it. I’ve used 1 pound and really like it but most of my fishermen don’t know how to cast it. And you probably catch as many fish on 2 pound as you do 1.”

I noted that it might pass for a small streamer in some fly circles. Lonnie smiled and shook his head. 

“A lot of my fly fishermen won’t use it because it’s not really a fly, I guess,” he says. “You know how some of them are. But the best way to fish them is on a fly rod.”

He’d given me a black marabou jig tied on what I guessed to be a No. 12 hook. It was practically weightless. 

“What does this weight?”

“I don’t know. But that’s the smallest one.”

“You tie these?”

“No. I get ‘em from a guy over in Fayetteville (Arkansas).”

That guy is Jim Hall, who, along with his wife, Pam, operates P. J’s Finesse Baits. Jim Hall is an attorney and lay pastor. He and Pam Hall use their jig business in part to support mission work, first in Honduras and more recently, Guatemala. The jig Lonnie had given me was a 1/125-ounce marabou jig. They’re available in 22 different colors or color combinations. The Halls also sell a 1/200-ounce fly tying jig head (available in seven colors) with a No. 14 hook and a 1/100-ounce tying head. Find out everything you want to know about P. J’s Finesse Baits at www.ejigs.com. 

After lunch I dug an 8-foot, 5-weight from my travel pack and tied on the jig. Lonnie pulled us into an eddy at the at the edge of a wide tail out where I caught a consecutive string of trout until a feisty rainbow darted behind a basketball size rock and I snapped the tippet. Most fish had hit on the downstream swing but a couple stuck on the fall. 

“I’m going to order some of these.”

“That’s what most people say after they try one,” Lonnie said. “They’re also good for stream smallmouth fishing.”

Saturday, 21 November 2015

Survival Skills: 3 Ways To Stop Severe Bleeding

An exsanguinating hemorrhage can be a deadly medical emergency, one that could kill in less than a minute. But with a quick response of the proper bleeding control techniques, it’s possible to stop further blood loss and potentially save a life. Grab a good first aid book, and study up on these three techniques.

Direct Pressure
This instinctive response is often the right response. Using a large dressing (or bare hand, if need be), apply heavy pressure to the wound. It’s best if there is a dressing over the wound, one that can be constricted, such as an Israeli bandage. It’s also helpful to elevate the wound, if it’s on an extremity. When flat direct pressure over the wound is not enough, try packing the wound with gauze. Wad up a ball of gauze and insert it into the wound, following the ball with as much gauze as you can pack. Then apply another flat dressing over the surface.

Pressure Points
This technique is always used as a supplement to direct pressure and wound packing. Learn where the femoral arteries and brachial arteries run (groin and inside center of upper arms), and learn how much pressure to apply. This is more like crimping off a garden hose than performing medicine, but the use of pressure points can help to stop the blood flow when used with pressure dressings.

Tourniquet
The tourniquet is a last-ditch method to save a life when the victim has an exsanguinating hemorrhage on a limb. Apply the tourniquet as high on the limb as possible, and crank down hard enough to stop the blood flow—no matter how much the victim screams. Write down the time you applied the tourniquet, ideally on the victim and rush them to modern medical care. Never remove a tourniquet in the field.

Do you carry the medical supplies (or have the know-how) to stop severe bleeding? Let us know by leaving a comment.

Friday, 20 November 2015

Proof That You Can Kill a Buck with Your Bow During Gun Season

Bowhunting during the gun deer season? Yes it happens, in some states quite a bit, and some of the diehard bowhunters who don blaze orange and hit the woods with their gun-toting brethren wouldn’t have it any other way. By going in stealth mode with archery equipment, they find their footprint is lighter than it might be if they fired a gun, giving them a “shot” at multiple deer.

Two bowhunters who find consistent success during their state’s annual gun season include Mark and Kyle Herr of Minnesota, who specialize in hunting the big bucks of suburban Minneapolis. I’ve shared many of the Herr’s tactics previously (see Suburban Legends), but a point that was somewhat lost in that piece is that most years the Herrs must don blaze orange while attempting to bow-bag their quarry. The Herrs, you may recall, focus almost exclusively on mature bucks—animals 4.5 years and older—and have a large trophy room filled with proof their refined tactics work consistently.

Recently this fall, the pair added to their collection by tagging two more mature metro bucks. Last Saturday, Kyle, 33, tagged out on a 140-class buck that came charging in to a grunt call on a crisp suburban morning. As Kyle tells it, the hunt was fairly typical for a spot that was obviously holding several hot does.

“I heard the buck crashing through brush from the moment I climbed into the stand; I could tell he was about 100 yards north of me, and I could hear him making scrapes on an island in a cattail slough,” Kyle said. “About 10 minutes after legal shooting light, I gave him a grunt, and he came right to my tree—cutting across the slough pretty much on a line. I wanted to wait to call until there was good shooting light, and it worked out perfectly.

“There were deer running all over that morning,” Kyle recalled. “After the shot I waited a good while there on stand; I didn’t want to spook any deer if I could avoid it. I sat there for over an hour, and saw six different bucks and five does. Mine was the biggest buck I saw that day, but we know there are bigger deer around, and my dad hadn’t yet tagged out.”

While the Herrs have permission to hunt several, widely scattered suburban properties, Kyle was wise enough to know the farm on which he’d just scored was smoking hot—and likely holding several hot does. After sharing the intel with his dad Mark, the elder Herr made plans to hunt the same farm.

By early afternoon on Monday, Mark Herr was sitting in the very same stand where Kyle had scored. It’s a spot where three separate fingers of timber come together, forming an intersection in a large cattail swamp. Mark’s hunt would not take long.

“He said he pretty much climbed up into the tree, and the buck came snooping in, checking for does,” Kyle related of Mark’s encounter with an unusual nontypical buck the pair knew well from their months of game-cam surveillance on the property. The Herrs had named the buck “Funky Town” for its twisted, gnarly, left-side antler. “When he came in, my dad told me he thought, ‘Gosh, I can’t pass on Funky Town,’ and then he made a good shot—maybe 20 yards. He hadn’t been on stand more than 15 minutes.”

Kyle estimated his dad’s unique deer at 4.5 or 5.5 years old; further examination found an old injury—a softball-sized knot—on the deer’s right back leg, which no doubt forced the left-side antler deformity. Also as a result of the injury, the buck had been dragging its back right hoof, which was worn down severely. Otherwise, the buck appeared to be in good health.

“It’s a very unique, mature deer, not one of the monsters we know the farm holds, but a great deer in most anyone’s book,” Kyle said, explaining that Mark, just a minute or two after arrowing the non-typical, had a run-in with yet another target buck that wandered through, looking for does within 20 yards.

“He was a big nine-point we’ve estimated to be in the high 150s or 160s, but we’re certainly happy with both of our bucks, and we know we have some good seed around for next year,” Kyle said.
Are you ready to try bowhunting during your state’s gun season? Check your local regs, be sure to wear the required blaze orange, then tell us how your exciting hunt unfolded.

The Science of Hearing Loss for Shooters and Hunters, and How to Prevent It

Many of our most beloved outdoor writers of the 20th century shared something in common beyond their mutual love of hunting and shooting and their skill with a pen. Many—including such greats as the late Elmer Keith, Jack O’Connor, and Nash Buckingham—were nearly deaf from the cumulative effects of gunfire that they sustained over a lifetime of shooting. 

How Hearing Loss Occurs
Hunters and shooters are at particular risk for noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL). This can occur after a single exposure to gunfire or, as in the case of our esteemed outdoor writers, over a lifetime. NIHL occurs when a person is exposed to sounds above 85 dBA, and the sensitive hair cells in the inner ear, which transduce sound waves into nerve impulses, are either damaged (temporary hearing loss) or killed (permanent hearing loss). These delicate hair cells will not regenerate in humans, as they do in fish and birds. 

Factors Affecting Shooters
Hearing loss may not affect both ears equally. Because of acoustic shadowing by the head, those shooting rifles and shotguns typically suffer greater hearing loss in the ear that is nearest to the muzzle. For a right-handed shooter, the left ear is generally exposed to 3 to 7 dBA more noise than the right ear. Other factors that affect the amount of noise a shooter is exposed to include the barrel length of the firearm (shorter barrels are generally louder), cartridge intensity, bullet speed (subsonic vs. supersonic), and the presence of a muzzle brake, which can add up to an additional 11 dBA. Your shooting environment is also an important consideration. Enclosed areas with hard, acoustically reflective surfaces, such as an indoor shooting range with inadequate sound baffling, increases reverberation and sound exposure. Sound is also directional, so those standing beside a rifle, particularly if that rifle has a muzzle brake, receive considerably more noise exposure than the shooter.

Prevention
Attenuation of gunfire noise can be accomplished using either passive or active hearing protection. The relative amount of noise attenuation is described by a Noise Reduction Rating (NRR), which is usually printed on the packaging that comes with ear protection. This is a complex unit of measurement expressed in decibels, and is useful for comparing the relative level of noise attenuation among various forms of hearing protection. The higher the NRR number, the greater the noise reduction and the better hearing protection it provides. 

The caveat here is that how well any hearing-protection device works depends on proper fit. Earplugs must completely seal the ear canal. Earmuffs must completely encompass the ear. Further, hearing protection devices do not reduce all frequencies of sound to the same degree, so the NRR, while useful, is still just a general guide to the amount of noise attenuation they provide. 

Types of Hearing Protection
Passive hearing protection takes the form of either earplugs or conventional earmuffs. These can reduce actual noise by 5 to 13 dBA (see “Actual Levels of Protection,” opposite). For noise that exceeds 105 dBA, the combined use of both earplugs and earmuffs is recommended. However, the degree of noise attenuation is not simply the combined NRR values for each type of hearing protection. For example, earplugs may have an NRR of 29 dBA and earmuffs an NRR of 27 dBA, but the additive effect is only about 34 dBA. This is because bone conduction allows a certain amount of sound to bypass the outer ear and directly stimulate the middle and inner ear. A good approximation of combined attenuation can be determined by simply adding 5 dBA to the higher of the two NRR values (see “The Numbers Behind Noise,” opposite).

A third choice of passive hearing protection is custom earplugs. Molded in silicone or rubber, they conform precisely to the wearer’s ear, thus ensuring a perfect fit. These are generally considered to be more comfortable than conventional earplugs. They are as effective (or more so) as regular earplugs and range widely in price from about the cost of a good set of passive headphones to several hundred dollars. 

Active noise reduction (ANR) works through a process called destructive interference, and occurs when an incoming sound wave is met with an inverse sound wave produced by the headphone, thus cancelling out the incoming sound. These noise-cancelling headphones are no better at protecting your ears than passive hearing protection, and have NRR ratings ranging from 15 to 30 dBA. They are also considerably more expensive than passive forms of hearing protection. However, they do offer the advantage of allowing normal conversation by amplifying useful sounds like voices while reducing high-impulse sounds. 

So which form of hearing protection is best? Earplugs are simple to use, inexpensive, disposable, will not get in the way of your stock, and are as effective as any other type of protection. However, some shooters find them uncomfortable to wear and difficult to properly fit. Passive earmuffs are more expensive and more bulky, but they are generally more comfortable than earplugs. Nevertheless, combining the two remains the most effective way to reduce exposure to noise. 

MSA Supreme Pro X
A top-of-the-line unit that is comfortable, with excellent sound quality and slim ear cups. ($370; msasafety.com)

Impact Sport
These lightweight electronic muffs are a great value, have low-profile cups, and fold down small. ($60; howardleight.com)

Walker’s Pro Low-Profile
These simple muffs are affordable and shaped to work well with shotguns and rifles. ($18; gsmoutdoors.com)

Surefire Sonic Defenders
Comfortable plugs that stay put. ($14; surefire.com)  

Foam Ear Plugs
Offer good protection solo or when combined with muffs.

The Numbers Behind the Noise
Understanding decibels
The decibel scale is logarithmic, so perceived loudness of sound increases by a factor of 10 for every 10 dBA increase. For every 3 dBA increase in sound-intensity level, the intensity doubles.

Calculating noise reduction
To determine the actual degree of sound attenuation from hearing protection, take the NRR value, subtract 7, and divide the remainder by 2. So for a set of earplugs that has an NRR of 33 dBA, the actual noise reduction is only 13 dBA. If the ambient sound exposure was 150 dBA, the earplugs would reduce that sound to 137 dBA. 

What doubling-up does
To figure out how much sound attenuation you get when doubling up on hearing protection, take the higher of the two NRR ratings and add 5 dBA. Then apply the formula above to that figure. 

How loud is it? 
Relative sound intensity levels of various cartridges and common sounds.  

Actual Levels of protection 
Typical NRR values and the real-world sound attenuation for various forms of hearing protection when used singly and in combination.

Gun Stories of the Week: Gun Control Laws are a Jihadi's Best Friend

TOP STORY
Gun control laws: A Jihadi ’s best friend

Since the Paris attacks, a lot of Americans—as they commute on mass transit, as they stroll a shopping mall, as they stand in stadium crowds—are taking a moment to wonder, “Could that happen here?”

Economist and gun rights commentator John Lott, president of the Crime Prevention Research Center, says you can calculate your odds of being a terrorist target not only by where you live, but by how strict gun control is where you live. 

By this calculation, he says, your risk of being a terrorist target is greater in places with tight gun control: places like Paris, like New York, and like Washington, D.C.

After all, Lott said, a terrorist would be using the same criteria a criminal or lunatic would use in targeting defenseless victims, always seeking “soft” populations legally unarmed and easily ambushed for their slaughtering pleasure.

“Some places, like Washington, D.C., or New York or Los Angeles would be more attractive [targets] than places like Dallas or parts of Florida,” Lott told Brendan Kirby of Polizette.

Of course, Chicago would be ideal if it weren’t for the city’s heavily armed army of criminals, who don’t obey the city’s strict gun control laws because, you know, they’re criminals.

Folks in Texas and Alabama aren’t taking any chances, where Americans have flooded into gun stores to purchase new guns and sign up for concealed carry permit classes in record numbers since the Paris attacks.

According to Fox News San Antonio, individuals recently buying those guns include many who have never owned a gun before. Texas Guns store owner Jerry McCall says he is seeing “people … in their 70s and 80s who say they have never owned a firearm before but think [they] need one in the house now.”

Mary Hernandez told Fox News San Antonio that she and her husband bought their first gun last year and are shopping for their second in the wake of the Paris attacks. She and her husband “feel they can never be too protected.” 

Hernandez observed, “I don’t want to be with my kids and my family hiding under a table; I want to be protecting us and get out of there and if I had to, try to stop somebody.”

Meanwhile, in Alabama, WSFA reports that gun stores are seeing the same kind of run. Russell Durling, who owns Last Resort Guns in Madison County, told WSFA , “We were busy right out of the box” following the attacks. 

“The truth of it is,” he added, “When America is scared, America buys guns.” 

In addition to the gun sales, Alabama store owners told WSFA that they are seeing a surge in concealed carry permit applications/course attendance, as well. Concealed classes at Texas Guns “have doubled in the last week,” and the Limestone, Alabama, Sheriff’s Office reports witnessing its “biggest spike in permits” after the attacks on Friday, according to AWR Hawkins at breitbart.com.

None of this stopped the gun control lobby from capitalizing on the terrorist attack by using the event to push their agenda. Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) is warning that the ISIS is encouraging sympathizers to purchase weapons in the U.S.

“Obviously it is frightening for every Western country, but I do want to remind you, before we killed a jihadist named [Anwar al-] Awlaki, he did a video that said to Americans, ‘Join the Jihad and get guns, because it’s so easy in the United States of America to get a weapon,'” Schakowsky told Sirius XM radio this week, as first reported by BuzzFeed News.

“And that ought to be a chilling reminder because, aside from blowing themselves up, which is, of course, not about small weapons, these people used the kinds of weapons that are still available in the United States of America,” she continued. “I think it ought to cause us to have another consideration of sensible gun-safety laws.”

According to reports, terrorists in the Paris attack used fully automatic weapons. Schakowsky was pressed on how the terrorists had guns in France, which has much tougher restrictions on firearms.

She said it “was not clear" how they acquired guns. “Well, you know, we traffic in some small weapons around the world and so it’s not clear actually where those came from, but you’re right. ... People get them,” Schakowsky said. “But they’re so available was the message that was sent to possible recruits for the terrorist organizations.”

Some Republicans have pointed to the attack in Paris as an argument against strict gun laws, suggesting that the victims could have defended themselves.

Donald Trump, the front-runner for the Republican nomination, said the attack would have been “different” — not “terrific!”? —if civilians were armed.

For more, go to: 

Alabama gun sales spike after Paris attacks

Sitting Ducks in Gun-Free Cities

Congresswoman: Paris Attack A “Chilling Reminder” That We Need Tighter Gun Laws

Trump Blames Paris Death Toll on Gun Laws

EUROPE’S EXAMPLE SHOWS DANGERS OF OPEN BORDERS, GUN CONTROL

Dem: Paris a 'chilling reminder' we need tighter gun laws

LISTEN: After Paris, Obama’s Big Push? Gun Control – Rules for Patriots Ep. 3

NY DAILY NEWS: PARIS TERROR ATTACKS HIGHLIGHT THREAT POSED BY NRA

Can guns be part of the national security conversation?

The NRA Thinks Everyone Deserves a Gun, Including Terrorists

Paris and Gun Control


MURPHY’S BILL
Address mental illness or go insane perpetuating policies that don’t work

Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan (Wisc.) is reportedly pushing Rep. Tim Murphy’s (R-Pa.) ‘Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis Act’ as a Congressional response to gun violence. 

During an interview with CBS’s "60 Minutes," Ryan was asked if he’d propose any gun legislation. “I haven’t thought of proposing gun legislation, I think the big problem we have is enforcing the law as we have on the books right now,” Ryan said, before pointing the conversation to mental health.

“The other issue that I think we need to take a look at, and I’m pushing this in the Commerce committee, is Congressman Murphy’s legislation on mental health,” he said. “I think we need to improve our mental health laws so we can address these problems before they get out of control, because mental health is a component to a lot of these shootings that, I think, we have not looked at seriously enough.”

Murphy’s bill, which was recently advanced by the House Energy and Commerce health subcommittee, would overhaul the system for treating mentally ill people, reports Washington Examiner.

In a Nov. 19 column in the Washington Examiner, Murphy said his ‘Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis Act’ (H.R. 2646) addresses two stark facts uncovered by decades of documentation and analysis: Since 1982, an estimated 58 percent of 72 mass shootings were by someone with mental illness and, of an average of 41,000 suicides a year, more than 90 percent have a mental illness. 

Murphy, House Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee Chair, said that despite 112 federal and state programs spending $130 billion annually on mental health, at least 164,000 of the most seriously mentally ill Americans are homeless, 365,000 are incarcerated, 770,000 are on probation or parole and 95,000 are regularly denied a hospital bed because of the bed shortage. 

“When we looked at why there are so many problems, all roads led to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA),” Murphy wrote. “It's a small, relatively obscure federal agency but it develops most of the nation's mental health policy. Rather than focusing on reducing homelessness, hospitalization, or incarceration in people with serious mental illness, SAMHSA focused federal and state efforts on delivering 'behavioral wellness' to everyone else.” 

Murphy’s bill proposes to “fix this obscenity” by “redeploying federal assets to where they can do the most good” and getting rid of SAMHSA, replacing the agency with an Assistant Secretary of Mental Health and Substance Use Disorders position that will focus resources on the mission —“getting treatments that reduce homelessness, arrest, incarceration, hospitalization, suicide and violence to people with untreated serious mental illness. That will keep patients, the police and the public safer.”

The bill has 142 bipartisan co-sponsors, the support of the House leadership, the support of families of the seriously ill, the Treatment Advocacy Center, Mental Illness Policy Org, International Association of Chiefs of Police, National Sheriff's Association and others, but has not been brought up for a vote. T

Meanwhile, on Nov. 17, two House Republicans filed legislation to force the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) to accept gun licenses as passenger identification at airport security checkpoints. 

"Handgun licenses are a government-issued form of identification and no one has given me a valid reason why they cannot be accepted at TSA checkpoints," said Rep. Diane Black (R-Tenn.), one of the sponsors of the legislation.

Rep. Bill Flores (R-Texas), the other co-sponsor, said gun licenses contain similar information as the other forms of identification the TSA considers acceptable. "The requirements to obtain a concealed license are similar and often times stricter than that of obtaining a standard ID card," Flores said in a statement. 

For more, go to:

Pass the Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis Act now

Paul Ryan Backing Mental Health Reform Bill

GOP bill would allow gun licenses as airport ID

Ryan points to mental health bill as response to gun violence

Wasau gun owner in DC to strengthen gun control laws


STATE ROUNDUP
Ohio expanded conceal carry bill to go before Senate

A proposed Ohio bill that would make concealed carry legal in day-care centers, airport terminals, government buildings and police stations awaits a vote in the state’s senate. On Nov. 17, the Ohio House approved it in a highly partisan vote.

House Bill 48 is the latest effort to roll back restrictions on where hidden handguns can be legally carried that were put into place more than a decade ago when Ohio first legalized concealed carry. The bill would allow drivers to enter school safety zones with guns, but they could not carry them into schools.

The measure passed 68-29 with most of the chamber’s Democrats opposing the bill and all Republicans supporting it. 

Rep. Ron Maag (R., Lebanon), the bill’s sponsor, stressed that the changes apply only to those with permits to carry.

For more, go to:

House vote OKs concealed guns in more public places

Michigan — New law ‘streamlines’ gun permitting process, eliminates county boards

Florida — Open-carry gun bill survives house showdown

Ohio — Primary motive for a gun bill

Oregon — Not about gun control

Baltimore City Council committee rejects gun sales tax resolution

Illinois — Editorial: For everybody's safety, enforce this gun law

Revamped N.J. smart gun bill advances after drawing fire from opponents

Texas politician now fears his own lax gun laws

Georgia — Gun group challenges makeup of Code Revision Commission


IN THE COURTS
Disabled senior faces eviction for using firearm to stop robbery

Harvey Lembo, 67, is a disabled, wheelchair-bound former lobsterman with degenerative heart disease who has survived three heart attacks and five burglaries in the six years he has lived in Park Place Apartments in Rockland, Maine.

And so, on Aug. 31 he legally purchased a handgun to protect himself because his physical disabilities make it difficult to deter criminals, he said. 

The next night, Sept. 1, Lembo shot and wounded Christopher Wildhaber, 45, in his living room after the intruder told Lembo he was robbing him of prescription medications “like everybody else.” 

Wildhaber was treated for his wounds and charged with burglary, criminal trespass, stealing drugs and refusing to submit to arrest. He remains at the Knox County Jail on $25,000 cash bail.

Lembo, who was not charged by local police, faces eviction for violating the apartment complex’s policy against firearms on the premises. He is challenging the eviction in a lawsuit claiming he is being punished for exercising his Constitutional right to defend himself.

Lembo names Park Place Associates and Stanford Management LLC as plaintiffs, and is seeking a permanent injunction prohibiting the complex from evicting him on the grounds that he owns a firearm. In the action filed on Nov. 16, he is also asking that his attorney fees be covered.
 
"We're interested in ensuring that people in Mr. Lembo's position are able to enjoy their full constitution rights, including their right to lawfully possess a firearm in self-defense," said Patrick Strawbridge, his Boston-based attorney.

The National Rifle Association applauded the lawsuit, which contends the landlord interfered with Lembo’s constitutional right to bear arms and violated the Maine Civil Rights Act, the Associated Press reported.

“Threatening to evict Mr. Lembo for defending himself clearly violates his constitutional rights,” said John Hohenwarter, an NRA Maine state liaison. “Self-defense is a fundamental, God-given right that belongs to every law-abiding American – no matter their tax bracket, ZIP code or street address.”

For more, go to:

Maine lobsterman who shot intruder sues landlord to keep gun

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