- 积分
- 3676
好友
记录
日志
相册
回帖0
主题
分享
精华
威望 旺
钢镚 分
推荐 人
|

注册后推荐绑定QQ,之后方才可以使用下方的“用QQ帐号登录”。
您需要 登录 才可以下载或查看,没有账号?立即注册
×
Warnings of Lead in Venison Irk Hunters - D3 H) t+ x* w& g# Y3 w
By JAMES MacPHERSON ( N9 f; ^: Q4 p* H& Z: D( U: B# z
6 E8 P& \2 j6 e/ B1 @) V
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — Thousands of pounds of venison donated to food pantries this year has become a contentious gift in three states.
" o! @) g8 |' l4 b! V2 g
9 O. W) C* m4 ^' D# f9 N* OOfficials in North Dakota, Minnesota and Iowa warn that the meat could be contaminated by lead from bullets. Hunting groups are calling it an overreaction.
. P. G4 |4 u' U- J! c
N+ X: w9 e# Y& i, r"It's alarmist and not supported by any science," said Lawrence Keane, a vice president and lawyer for the Newton, Conn.-based National Shooting Sports Foundation, a trade association for the firearms and ammunition industry. "High quality protein is now taken out of the mouths of needy, hungry people." + `$ d: f' b1 t, I# e
- Z, u. ^, I t" W; j5 P! j. N
North Dakota health officials on Wednesday told food pantries in the state to throw out donated venison, saying it may have lead fragments. Officials in Minnesota and Iowa followed with similar alerts, asking that venison in those states not be distributed.
/ v2 j3 G8 E$ ?" r8 h
. {9 P0 ^6 Q V" a3 wGov. John Hoeven said the alerts were issued as a precaution. He said the state has a "tremendous working relationship" with hunters, and the questions raised about venison are new.
% k/ O" x; m3 K a9 x# l, S7 |
2 h3 w* U3 N" F, CSafari Club International's Sportsmen Against Hunger program donated 317,000 pounds of venison last year to the needy, said Doug Burdin, a lawyer for the Tucson, Ariz.-based group. The meat donated by hunters was enough for more than 1.2 million meals, he said.
- e, V: w1 `6 L* F1 j4 v5 I2 i2 _, P( F
"It's provided a lot of free meals to a lot of people," Burdin said. "Hunters are doing something they love and helping others at the same time. This is disheartening, and we certainly don't think this program should come to an end on the unscientific assessment that has occurred here."
2 U/ e1 r8 A% V" a5 M' `5 [
$ t: |2 [' E3 I4 K+ ?( n. F6 [" n1 tDr. William Cornatzer, a Bismarck physician and hunter, alerted health officials after he conducted his own tests on venison using a CT scanner and found lead in 60 percent of 100 samples. The North Dakota Health Department confirmed the results on at least five samples of venison destined for food pantries.
: y' r+ @5 N" w5 y' h+ n
; |3 K ~ v3 {0 z) z) I# n"This isn't just a food pantry problem. This is a nationwide problem," Cornatzer said Friday.
+ o( @ ], r: s1 d W
5 R5 E0 z) Z* S) t" r1 f/ _! OHunters have alternatives to lead, he said. "I'm a big hunter. I've already purchased four boxes of copper bullets to next year," Cornatzer said.
% [! ?- D8 {4 d- n D0 D
5 C5 P4 V/ |/ `8 ^- ]5 I" L; PThe North Dakota Community Action Partnership distributed 17,000 pounds of venison from 381 donated deer after last year's hunting season, a number that has tripled since the program began in North Dakota in 2004, executive director Ann Pollert said. At least 4,000 pounds of venison were in food pantries in the state when the health department issued its warning, she said.
$ u0 w9 p5 p; B7 N/ ]; d
+ V( |+ l- C2 @$ DThe state has about 45 food pantries, and surveys have shown a need for more than 70,000 pounds of venison annually, Poller said. She hopes people will donate other types of meat.
9 b( h1 ^, m# C7 t5 j
2 a% U2 Y1 z8 Q+ l"Meat is so expensive," she said. "This is going to have an impact — it's a quality, lean meat protein source that we're losing." 2 Q/ n" i. ~0 F, h$ `5 N* ?- t% j
+ t2 ]* \1 n0 r6 L% K2 N
Jason Foss, president of Minot-based Pheasants for the Future, said hunters from his group donated about 100 deer this year to the program. He believes the issue of lead-contaminated meat is "a little extreme at this point."
" S0 W! X" o' F
( L# p8 g& E6 P. B& H"Sportsmen have been shooting deer for hundreds of years with lead bullets with no problems," he said. "I hope this program keeps rolling along because so much good comes out of it." & h5 `/ ^+ q3 R3 j! m+ [7 H" _
- S: ~5 ~( n! c4 h
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5g31EvC2Z_7le6gcQcpipO7LUwSfQD8VN07F80 |
|