Here is the interview I did with the local paper about my work with Sportsmen for Change.
We also stood along highway 71 with "DUMP" Dean Johnson signs the day of Prairie Pothole Days.
My Avitar is the picture the paper used in the article
[b]City man ?dedicated? to change in environmental funding[/b]
Carver County News, Watertown, MN Thursday Sept 7th
By John Mueller, Editor
Dan Berg is not a political person. The Watertown man doesn?t spend much time delving into the details of candidates? platforms hasn?t spent time researching voting records. The closest he came to a campaign was helping his grandfather and uncle when they made separate bids for county sheriff in a western Minnesota county. He works hard, takes care of his business.
But there is an issue that has Berg, 48, and thousands of out-doorsmen and women like him involved. Among outdoorsmen, it?s called ?dedicated funding.? Among lawmakers, it?s a far more complicated topic.
Outdoorsmen want a portion of the state?s sales tax ? one?eighth of 1 percent -- dedicated to cleaning up polluted wetlands and repairing wetlands that have been compromised or damaged. They want the commitment to be constitutionally dedicated for 25 years, a period that will raise $90 million annually toward benefiting wetlands around the state. The group believes that too many wetlands around the state have been lost to pollution and draining for agricultural purposes. Berg believes the loss of wetlands and clean lakes and rivers has resulted in the migratory flyway for ducks shifting to the west.
Berg has joined a political action committee (PAC) known as Sportsmen for Change. The group, at least for now, is working to make sure citizens know about the dedicated funding proposal.
The bill that would place the constitutionally dedicated funding proposal on the ballot for voter approval almost became a reality during the past session, Both the House and Senate approved versions of the proposal. The differences in the two versions were to he hammered out in a House-Senate conference committee at the end of the session as leaders of both bodies and Gov. Tim Pawlenty scrambled to try and avoid yet another special session. The Republican-controlled House and the DFL-controlled Senate could not reach an accord. Berg and Sportsmen for Change blame Sen. Dean Johnson, president of the Senate, for killing the dedicated funding proposal by refusing to consider any legislation that included dedicated funding. Johnson said he supported the proposal, but then killed it.
But the issue is perhaps a bit more complicated. Rep. Paul Kohl (R-Victoria), an advocate of dedicated funding for wildlife, said the issue was snarled in requests from the arts community for dedicated funding. Some people wanted the funding to come from existing tax revenue while others wanted to take it from revenue generated by new taxes, something the House and Pawlenty rejected.
In the end, unable to agree on a plan to bring to the conference committee that might stand a chance of being accepted, Johnson and the Senate DFL leadership, agreed to pull the dedicated funding plan off the table.
Berg says Sportsmen for Change is not affiliated with any political party. With the entirety of the House and Senate up for re-election this fall, Sportsmen for Change is also supporting candidates challenger or incumbent ? that support dedicated funding for the environment.
But the group is taking its proposal to the masses. The group has created a Web site- www. sportsmenforchange.org - promoting the dedicated funding issue. The site will carry the names of candidates that have signed on to support the dedicated funding cause. Sportsmen for Change also plans to raise public awareness through an informational campaign later in the fall. It is accepting contributions from anyone willing to give.
The group hopes to force the Senate and House to come to an agreement on the dedicated funding question. The grassroots group also brought its message to Game Fair, the celebration of all things outdoors held last month at Armstrong Ranch in Anoka. Berg said the group was well-received at the event.
Berg believes the duck population has decreased and its migratory patterns are also moving away from Minnesota because of the loss of ample, clean wetlands. As a boy, he fondly recalls hunting trips near Glencoe and Glenwood, a small town south of Alexandria.
?A lot of the land I used to hunt on, you can?t hunt there anymore,? he said.
Kohl says the dedicated funding effort will likely not come up as a constitutional issue until 2008. In the meantime, Berg says he?ll continue doing his part to raise awareness of an issue that is near and dear to his heart. The group is planning an Orange Hat Brigade rally before a gubernatorial debate Sept. 16 in St. Cloud. He?s urging people interested in the outdoors to check out Sportsmen for Change?s Web site for more information.
?It just makes sense. Who doesn?t want (clean) wetlands, lakes and rivers,? Berg said. ?1 just don?t understand why it can?t pass.
I will post more info about what is going to happen as soon as I get the OK.....