Izaak Walton League Agrees to Promote E.P.A. Lead Management Practices at 100 Shooting Ranges Nationwide;
Category:Air Type: News Source: EPA Date: Friday, January 17th, 2003
(#03004) New York, N.Y. - E.P.A. Administrator Christie Whitman today acknowledged the Izaak Walton League of Americafor agreeing to promote EPA-recommended best management practices for lead at over 100 of its outdoor shooting ranges. Administrator Whitman, the League and representatives from the shooting range industry signed a Memorandum of Understanding at the League's Arlington-Fairfax chapter, highlighting the League's voluntary efforts to reduce the amount of lead from lead shot and bullets entering the environment. Shooting ranges in the U.S. deposit in excess of 160 million pounds of lead into the environment annually. The Izaak Walton League's commitment is a major step in the industry's effort to manage lead from spent ammunition at ranges nationwide. Administrator Whitman also presented a plaque to the League for its efforts.
"Lead exposure poses serious health risks, especially to the most vulnerable in society - our children," said Administrator Whitman. "The good news is that if lead is managed properly and exposure minimized, the environmental and health risks are greatly reduced. Today, the Izaak Walton League is demonstrating its environmental leadership by joining with us to address these health and environmental risks, and is setting an important example for other ranges and organizations around the country to follow."
"This is an amazing opportunity," said Paul Hansen, the League's executive director. "The League is in a position to emerge as one of the leaders in promoting environmental stewardship at shooting ranges."
With the help of shooting sports organizations and the shooting range industry, E.P.A. created its Best Management Practices for Lead at Outdoor Ranges manual to address concerns that accumulated lead from shot and bullets may pose a risk to the environment and human health. Since the manual was published in 2001, shooting ranges nationwide have expressed a strong interest in adopting these practices. The manual has received widespread accolades: a European shooting trade association has published a handbook on the same topic based on EPA's manual, which holds up EPA's publication as a "model for other countries."
The Izaak Walton League is the 1st organization to sign a formal Memorandum of Understanding with E.P.A. to promote environmental stewardship at its ranges. The League will work with E.P.A. and the Countrywide Association of Shooting Ranges to develop a sample Environmental Stewardship Project that each of the League's ranges could modify and adopt. In 2001, Orvis Sandanona, located in Millbrook, New York and the oldest licensed shooting preserve in the nation, also adopted EPA's recommended best management practices for lead at outdoor ranges.
EPA's efforts to promote environmental practices at shooting ranges complement the Agency's Resource Conservation Challenge, which calls on all Americans to reduce, reuse and recycle goods to decrease the use of new natural resources. EPA's best management practices for outdoor ranges call for reclaiming lead and recycling it into new shot and bullets. This reduces the amount of virgin lead that must be mined. As EPA's recommended practices grow in popularity across the nation, the Agency expects to see an increase in lead reclamation and a reduction in the threat lead from ranges poses to the environment.
Take advantage of carpools and ride-share programs. You can cut your weekly fuel costs in half and save wear on your car if you take turns driving with other commuters. Many urban areas allow vehicles with multiple passengers to use High Occupancy Vehicle (HOV) lanes which are typically less congested, further improving your fuel economy.
Featured Report
Trash & Recycling By Material
See which materials generate the most trash, and also which are recycled most
Federal Air Marshals Face A Hostile Work Environment, ABC News Reports He told ABC, "Sooner or later, if you do not have people operating at their peak efficiency, then you take the risk that a terrorist is going to get away with his dirty deed." The 118-page report, which is to be made public on Thursday, reveals that ...Contra Costa Times editorial: California air board's vision of green cars ... Unlike earlier efforts by California to reduce auto pollution with catalytic converters and bans on leaded gasoline, the auto industry is working with state officials. That's in large part because General Motors and Chrysler agreed not to sue ...New California air-quality rules would dramatically increase green cars on the ... The proposed regulations, which supporters say would keep California at the forefront of the clean cars movement, are intended to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 34 percent and smog-forming pollution by 75 percent by 2025. "We continue to face clean ...