Professional Sharpshooting Considered For Deer Management: Report
ARLINGTON, VA — Arlington County Board will be considering amendments to the county's firearms ordinance at its meeting on Saturday to allow professional sharpshooting as a means of deer management.
The following is the summary of the amendments the board will be considering regarding its deer management program.
"Ordinance to amend, reenact and recodify Chapter 13 Firearms, Article II (Firearms Ordinance) of the Arlington County Code to amend Section 13-14 to exclude the discharge of firearms for County supervised deer management activities from the prohibition of firearms on County property; and to amend, reenact and recodify Chapter 17 Miscellaneous Offenses and Provisions of the Arlington County Code to amend Section 17-5 to permit the discharge of firearms for County supervised deer management activities."
In spring 2021, Arlington County officials launched the Deer Management Program to study and determine whether the county needed to actively manage the deer population in order to reduce the impact on county-owned natural land parks.
"Based on expert recommendations from the project consultant, community feedback, regional benchmarking, peer-reviewed research, and local data, the County Manager is recommending a hybrid approach centered around professional sharpshooting to immediately reduce that population in Arlington's County-owned natural land parks," according to a county release.
The following provides an overview of using professional sharpshooting as a way to control deer populations.
Board members will be considering the professional sharpshooting amendments along with dozens of other items at irs Regular Board Meeting on Saturday, Nov. 16, at 8:30 a.m. and its Recessed Meeting on Tuesday, Nov. 19, at 3 p.m. Meetings convene in the County Board Room on the third floor of 2100 Clarendon Blvd. and are open to the public. Visit the County website for information on speaking at a County Board Meeting.