Hunters rally against trespassing bill
Published 9:02 pm Tuesday, January 17, 2017
By Tyler Woodall and Julie Rothey
Capital News Service
About 150 hunters and members of the Virginia Hunting Dog Alliance visited the Virginia Capitol on Tuesday to show their opposition to a bill that would fine the owners of dogs that trespass on other people’s property.
House Speaker William J. Howell, R-Stafford, is sponsoring HB 1900, which would impose a $100 fine if a dog runs onto a property the owner has declared off limits, whether verbally, in writing, by placing signs or by marking trees with blue paint on the property line.
Speakers addressing a blaze orange-clad crowd included H. Kirby Burch, chief executive officer of the Virginia Hunting Dog Alliance; Jeff Sili, a member of the Caroline County Board of Supervisors; and recently elected state Sen. Mark Peake, R-Lynchburg.
“Your participation sends a message that you care, that you are watching, and you do pay attention,” Burch told the crowd as the rally began.
Burch said the bill would penalize accidental trespassing by hunting dogs.
Peake said he would vote against the bill if it gets past the House and will stand up to anyone to protect hunting rights.
Sili also said the bill is flawed. “A point that is lost in all of this,” he said is that “law enforcement is not prepared to take on what this is going to cause, because it will become a tool amongst neighbors who don’t like their neighbor’s dog in their yard. It’s not just a hunting issue.”
Nearly all the speakers said the bill is wrongfully aimed at hunters.
“I have no redeeming graces for the bill,” Burch said in an interview after the rally. “It is a bill to do harm, because someone has an agenda.”
Users of hunting dogs “want people to understand we’re God-fearing, law-abiding citizens,” Burch said. “We’re not rednecks, we’re not troublemakers and we care about our animals.”
Theresa Miller, who with her husband owns Red Oak Foxhounds hunt club in Rawlings, echoed Burch’s message.
“You cannot fault the whole deer hunting community because of the actions of a few people,” Miller said.
HB 1900 awaits action by the House Rules Committee, which Howell chairs.
Under current law, it’s a misdemeanor to intentionally release dogs on another person’s land to hunt without the consent of the landowner. However, finding a dog on another’s property is not enough evidence to prove the intentional release of that animal.
If a hunting dog strays onto another person’s property, the hunter has the right to retrieve the animal. This applies even if the hunter has been previously asked not to trespass. Landowners have been pushing for a repeal to the “right to retrieve” law.
“The ‘right to retrieve’ law is an unconstitutional law,” said Donald Wright, a landowner in the town of Virgilina in Halifax County. He supports HB 1900, saying the bill “restores property rights to people like me.”
The Virginia Hunting Dog Alliance argued in a press release that conversations should happen between neighbors before regulations are introduced. But Wright, a hunter himself, said he has tried that.
“I’ve been told, ‘You’re not from around here; you’re the problem; get used to it,’” he said. Wright stressed that he doesn’t want to see dog hunting done away with. “It’s just the bad apples.”
Landowners have complained about hunting dogs on their property, and hunters following them, in the past. The Virginia Landowners Association is pushing for stricter licensing regulations for dog hunters.
“I’m not able to enjoy my land. There’s dogs on my property almost every day,” Aaron Bumgarner, executive director of the landowners association, said in an interview with The Tidewater News. “I can’t take my own two dogs out on my land without conflict during the general [hunting] season and even during spring turkey season.”
From July 2014 to June 2015, about 5 percent of hunting complaints in Virginia involved dogs, according to the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries.