Field and Game Australia explained

Field & Game Australia (FGA) is an Australian non-government organization formed in 1958 for conservation, hunting and clay target shooting. It is based in Seymour, Victoria.

FGA advocates for "sustainable utilisation" and hunting to conserve the native flora and fauna of Australia. FGA volunteers undertake waterfowl counts each year to assist governmental wildlife managers to obtain waterfowl population numbers and locations. These figures are not published but reported to the Hunting Advisory Committee.

FGA members have built and organised the construction of thousands of nest boxes across Australia. These are monitored regularly, nesting numbers are recorded, and introduced species are removed. This work has been successful in breeding birds and educating the wider community of the importance of wetlands and their native inhabitants.

History

The Victorian Field and Game Association was established in 1958 at Sale. The name comes from "field sportsmen" and "game management" abbreviated to "Field & Game". Field & Game was formed by hunters who were concerned at the loss of wetland habitat for the game birds they observed and hunted.

Other resolutions adopted at that first meeting in 1958 were:

At its first meeting the association adopted the following motto- "The wildlife of today is not ours to dispose of as we please. We have it in trust. We must account for it to those who come after".~ King George VI

Initially the association concentrated its efforts on three wetlands of significance: Winton Swamp near Benalla (now Lake Mokoan), Tower Hill in Western Victoria and Jack Smith Lake in Gippsland.

In those early days the association appeared as radical in its aims as many contemporary conservation groups do today. This was because hunters placed a value on swampland, which at the time because of its unsuitability for agriculture, was otherwise regarded as being useless. Many in the community thought the FGA members odd, when they proposed that regulated water supply from irrigation systems should be available to wetlands.

"Building Assets for all Australians"

Members of the association lobbied for the introduction of a shooter's license system that would make funds available for the protection of wetland habitats. Under Sir Henry Bolte's direction, the shooter's license was established in 1959 and provided Victoria's first-ever funds for game and wildlife management. Important areas of waterfowl habitat were purchased and the Game Research Station at Serindip near Lara was established – now a wetland education centre. The shooters license raises over $4 million annually. A new game license introduced in 1990 raises another $1 million annually.

In 1978 the FGA won the Conservation Council of Victoria's prize for the organization that had contributed the most to conservation over a five-year period.

Organisational structure

FGA has over 15,000 members, over 60 branches and 51 simulated field clay target shooting grounds throughout Australia. FGA volunteers spend thousands of hours on a variety of activities, including wetland rehabilitation and management, shooter education, waterfowl identification courses ("WIT tests"), firearm safety and training, pest and vermin eradication, and organised duck hunts and fox drives.

The individual FGA branches are made up of the members of the national body, and the branches' delegates vote at national meetings. Each branch is an incorporated association, with individual members being entitled to vote at branch meetings. The current chairman of Field & Game Australia (national body) is Russell Bate. Its current patrons include former Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser, former Speaker of the House of Representatives David Hawker and zoologist Prof. Grahame Webb. Former patrons include the late Sir Henry Bolte, and former Victorian Governor the late Sir Rohan Delacombe.

Legal issues

In 2009, Sale Field & Game spokesperson Gary Howard was found guilty in Sale Magistrates Court on the charges of taking and using water without authority, and with interfering with the flow in a waterway. Howard was fined $1500 and ordered to pay costs of $1500. The Heart Morass adjoins Lake Wellington and water taken from the river was beneficial to the environment and did not deprive any other land users or downstream environments. The actions were uncovered by the anti-hunting group Coalition Against Duck Shooting, who monitored Heart Morass after learning that 100 FGA members had paid to hunt on the opening weekend. The police investigation showed that Howard, who is on the committee of management for Heart Morass, had released water onto the property, owned by the FGA, just prior to the opening of the hunting season to attract ducks for better game conditions for paying members.

In Victoria, following the 2011 duck season where an illegal protester was shot in the face by a shooter and in 2012 when other illegal protesters were charged and prosecuted, regulations were changed to increase public safety. New regulations were adopted in September 2012 and will be in place for the 2013 season. They incorporate what is known as "human safety regulations".

Advocacy of shooter's rights

Field and Game Australia represents members interests with government and legal submissions from time to time.

In 2002 the FGA were represented in the High Court in relation to the Yorta Yorta Native Title claim over areas in the Goulburn and Murray Valleys. The Yorta Yorta claim was over of land. The Yorta Yorta people gave evidence that they traditionally used the land to camp, hunt and fish. FGA opposed the claim for exclusive possession as they also used the land to camp hunt and fish.

In 2005–06, the Victorian Environmental Assessment Council proposed five new national parks (Barmah, Gunbower, Lower Goulburn, Warby-Ovens, Leaghur-Koorangie and a significant addition to Murray-Sunset) and five new regional or other parks. This would have significantly reduced public access to public land currently used for camping, fishing and hunting. The proposal would have restricted boat access to rivers enjoyed by Victorians. VEAC's proposals were based on economic assumptions that were shown to be flawed. FGA engaged consultants to challenge the economic assumptions and VEAC's proposals were subsequently rejected by the Victorian Government.

Members of Field & Game are included in an insurance scheme that provides them with $20 million public liability insurance and gun insurance.

Accomplishments

From 1963 to 1965, the VFGA opposed a proposal by the Victorian Government to drain the Hird and Johnson Wetlands near Kerang. Prior to this event, the organisation has worked to preserve these wetlands.

In 1978, the VFGA won the Victorian Conservation Prize for "the defence of Victoria's wetlands, the preservation of wildlife habitat and development of public awareness". The prize is awarded annually to an organisation who has shown notable contributions to conservation over the previous five years. The prize was awarded by the Minister for Conservation, but since the 1980s that prize has been replaced by LandCare Awards.

Research by the VFGA in Victoria during 1992-1993 showed that lead levels in Pacific black duck at Lake Buloke had reached internationally recognised levels dangerous to waterfowl (waterfowl mistakenly ingest lead pellets along with gravels as gastroliths needed to aid their digestion of food). This prompted the VFGA to work with government and support the phase-out of lead shots for waterfowl hunting, which was completed in 2002.

In 2001, FGA founded the Wetland Environmental Taskforce Public Fund (WET) to raise money to protect wetlands. WET has purchased the remaining Heart Morass wetlands from a private farm. Much of the wetland had been already drained to create pastures, and WET's purchase of the Heart Morass will protect it.

See also