Illinois Code § 520 ILCS 30/5

Findings.
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
The General Assembly finds the following:

 
 
(1) Recreational hunting is an important and 
 
traditional recreational activity in which 14,000,000 Americans 16 years of age and older participate. 

 
 
(2) Hunters have been and continue to be among the 
 
foremost supporters of sound wildlife management and conservation practices in the United States. 

 
 
(3) Persons who hunt and organizations related to 
 
hunting provide direct assistance to wildlife managers and enforcement officers of federal, state, and local governments. 

 
 
(4) Purchases of hunting licenses, permits, and 
 
stamps and payment of excise taxes on goods used by hunters have generated billions of dollars for wildlife conservation, research, and management. 

 
 
(5) Recreational hunting is an essential component of 
 
effective wildlife management, in that it is an important tool for reducing conflicts between people and wildlife and provides incentives for the conservation of wildlife, habitats, and ecosystems on which wildlife depend. 

 
 
(6) Recreational hunting is an environmentally 
 
acceptable activity that occurs and can be provided for on State public lands without adverse effects on other uses of that land. 

traditional recreational activity in which 14,000,000 Americans 16 years of age and older participate.
foremost supporters of sound wildlife management and conservation practices in the United States.
hunting provide direct assistance to wildlife managers and enforcement officers of federal, state, and local governments.
stamps and payment of excise taxes on goods used by hunters have generated billions of dollars for wildlife conservation, research, and management.
effective wildlife management, in that it is an important tool for reducing conflicts between people and wildlife and provides incentives for the conservation of wildlife, habitats, and ecosystems on which wildlife depend.
acceptable activity that occurs and can be provided for on State public lands without adverse effects on other uses of that land.

‹ Prev All Illinois sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.