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Pa Info!

Joined Oct 2009
3,165 Posts | 1+
upstate ny
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: May 01, 2013







Release #029-13







STATE’S SECOND DISEASE MANAGEMENT AREA CREATED IN RESPONSE TO CWD DMAs now in parts of six counties: Adams, Bedford, Blair, Cambria, Huntingdon and York







HARRISBURG – The Pennsylvania Game Commission has established the state’s second Disease Management Area in parts of four counties in response to three hunter-killed deer that tested positive for Chronic Wasting Disease.







Through an executive order, PGC Executive Director Carl G. Roe has created the state’s second Disease Management Area (DMA) in parts of Bedford, Blair, Cambria and Huntingdon counties. The first, in Adams and York counties, was established by executive order in October, 2012. Within these DMAs, there are special restrictions for people to minimize the risk of spreading CWD.







The executive order sets in place a variety of restrictions, including the following: it is illegal to remove or export high-risk cervid parts – including head, spine, spleen – from DMAs; all cervids killed in the DMAs are subject to testing by PGC; cervids within the DMAs cannot be rehabilitated, including injured and reportedly orphaned deer; the use or possession of cervid urine-based attractants is prohibited in DMAs; direct or indirect feeding of wild, free-ranging deer is illegal in DMAs; no new PGC permits will be issued to possess or transport live cervids.







Road-killed deer can be picked up under certain conditions, and those looking to do so can call their PGC regional office for approval.







“The second executive order creates a second Disease Management Area over nearly 900 square miles in Bedford, Blair, Cambria and Huntingdon counties and changes laws, regulations and restrictions related to free-ranging deer and other cervids,” Roe explained. “They are steps we have taken to provide additional protections to the state’s invaluable populations of wild deer and elk.







“We are counting on all Pennsylvanians to help us in this important endeavor,” Roe said. “Their cooperation will play a major role in helping to contain or limit the spread of CWD within the Commonwealth.”







The executive order and maps with descriptions of both DMAs have been posted on the Game Commission’s website, www.pgc.state.pa.us, in the CWD Info Section, which can be accessed from the website’s homepage. They also will be published in the 2013-14 Pennsylvania Hunting and Trapping Digest. Combined, both DMAs total nearly 1,500 square miles of the Commonwealth.







The Commonwealth’s CWD Interagency Task Force went into action to address the threat of the disease to captive and wild deer and elk populations in the state as soon as a captive white-tailed deer tested positive for CWD in October. Task force members include representatives from the state departments of Agriculture, Environmental Protection and Health, the Pennsylvania Game Commission, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, U.S. Geological Survey/Pennsylvania Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit and Penn State University/Cooperative Extension Offices. Generally, the state Department of Agriculture manages threats from captive deer and other cervids, while the Game Commission manages threats from wild deer and elk. The task force works to carry out an established response plan, which includes education and outreach with public meetings and minimizing risk factors through continued surveillance, testing and management.







Pennsylvania’s first case of CWD was reported by the state Department of Agriculture October 11, 2012; it involved a captive-born and -raised white-tailed deer from a farm near New Oxford in Adams County. The sample tissue was tested at the Pennsylvania Veterinary Laboratory in Harrisburg and verified at the National Veterinary Services Laboratory in Ames, Iowa. The Game Commission on March 1 announced the state’s first three cases of CWD in free-ranging deer.







CWD attacks the brains of infected deer, elk and moose. It is transmitted by direct animal-to-animal contact, such as through saliva, feces and urine, or indirectly by exposure to a contaminated environment. The disease is fatal and there is no known treatment or vaccine. CWD was first discovered in Colorado captive mule deer in 1967, and has since been detected in 21 other states and two Canadian provinces, including Pennsylvania’s neighboring states of New York, West Virginia and Maryland. Pennsylvania is the 22nd state to find CWD in a captive or wild deer population.







The 2012 hunter-killed deer from Bedford and Blair counties that tested positive for CWD were the first since the PGC began testing for the disease in 1998. Prior to that, more than 43,000 free-ranging deer and elk had tested negative for CWD.
 
You guys out there need to get a bunch of Keith Warren's videos and mail or hand them out to legislatures, newspapers, TVs, and Ag. people.

Show them how stupid they are!!

Gary
 
How do you think we could go about getting these videos from Keith.....has the original show even aired yet?
 
So since 1998 only 43,000 deer were tested. Could some one from Pennsylvania get the number of deer killed in Pennsylvania since 1998? Bet they're testing less than .01 % and we test 100%.
 
2009-10, 108,330 Antlered

2010-11, 122,930 Antlered

2011-12, 127,540 Antlered



2009-10, 200.590 Anterless

2010-11, 193,310 Anterless

2011-12, 208,660 Antlerless



Total = 961,370
 
So by these numbers you guys kill an average of around 300,000 deer a year? Which since 1998 is about 4.2 million. Give or take. So 43000 is less than 1 percent? Just noticed that they include elk in their numbers also. So the % they're testing is way lower.
 
no new PGC permits will be issued to possess or transport live cervids. What ex actually does this part mean I may be dumb but could someone clearify. Please
 
Freedom Whitetails said:
no new PGC permits will be issued to possess or transport live cervids. What ex actually does this part mean I may be dumb but could someone clearify. Please



No new farms-Farmers! No permits issued to move-sell deer in those counties! I believe they can still bring in deer, If they are doing what this state did!
 
Even though the dept of Ag is who handles captive herds and the Pgc has nothing to do with us selling or moving deer? Not being smart I just don't know
 
Mike/Angie- whoever is writing this, Please know that most people appreciate you posting the news releases on here for all to read but stick to the facts of what is going on in NY. You do not know JACK about PA.



Travis, if you need some info please give a call to the dept of AG or one of the senior board members at the PADFA. Also Travis you are correct, unlike communist NY our industry still has some freedoms as of today because we are a livestock industry, regulated by the Ag department.
 
Short Creek said:
So by these numbers you guys kill an average of around 300,000 deer a year? Which since 1998 is about 4.2 million. Give or take. So 43000 is less than 1 percent? Just noticed that they include elk in their numbers also. So the % they're testing is way lower.



The lowest harvest report is 308,000 animals from 2003-2012 with the highest being over 460,000 in 2003. The average population in PA has been est. at almost 1 million plus for all of these years.



From 1998 to present over 10 million whitetails have called pa home. With those numbers the PGC doesn't have a peg to stand on as far as testing per deer population numbers.
 
No new transport permits issued.....sounds great to the public...since we never needed transport permits to move deer anyway. I love how this only took them 2 months to come up with their "plan", they are all geniuses. How many deer were moved March 2nd to May 1st? And why does it even matter if you stop it now?

Exectutive Order number 3:

ATTENTION ALL WILD CERVIDS: YOU MUST LAY DOWN RIGHT WHERE YOU ARE, YOU ARE NOT TO MOVE UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE TO PROHIBIT THE SPREADING OF CWD, DO NOT SOCIALIZE WITH, OR SHARE ANY BODILY FLUIDS WITH ANY OF YOUR COUNTERPARTS.



I won't worry about any of this until I get confirmation from the Ag. The PA game commission does not regulate my deer herd, the AG does, and I believe We will receive any emails that actually mean anything to us from them. The game commission sure wants to look like the superhero's don't they?
 
Yep.....that was a nice read.......but I wouldn't lose any sleep over it quite yet Travis.......the PGC has no more authority over our deer than they do over my neighbors cows!
 
I just spoke to the dept of Ag and to clear up any concerns that press release has nothing to do with deer farms whatsoever it only refers to wild deer. So before we get worried or scared. It will be ok
 
Freedom Whitetails said:
I just spoke to the dept of Ag and to clear up any concerns that press release has nothing to do with deer farms whatsoever it only refers to wild deer. So before we get worried or scared. It will be ok



The reason the "permits/transport language" is in there, the PGC regulates menageries.
 
Josh said:
Mike/Angie- whoever is writing this, Please know that most people appreciate you posting the news releases on here for all to read but stick to the facts of what is going on in NY. You do not know JACK about PA.



Travis, if you need some info please give a call to the dept of AG or one of the senior board members at the PADFA. Also Travis you are correct, unlike communist NY our industry still has some freedoms as of today because we are a livestock industry, regulated by the Ag department.



Well josh if you would have read the post you may have noticed at the end it said.......If they are doing what this state did!...... Meaning there was a chance to what i said IF they do the same!!!! Thats the fact, Jack!
 
I read these posts every so often and it's hard to see people with a common interest going at each other like this. I'm half tempted to sell my entire heard because I see no future in an industry that can't stand together. I do what I can for the industry and I'd do more if I knew what else needed to be done, but from where I sit there's not going to be much hope for us if we can't have simple conversations without someone always trying to get the last poke in........