Here’s the meat of the article
If HB 1025 passes, it would expand the list of claimable dead animals to include turkeys and elk, and would expand the list of claimants to include not just the driver but anyone who might come along and discover the corpse. Specifically, any person “who discovers a deer, bear, turkey or elk that has been killed in a collision with a motor vehicle” could make the claim…
I see no problem with this. Why waste food?
Here’s the meat of the article
I see what you did there.
Probably people picking up meat that has spoiled/not knowing what to do with it, and getting sick. @BirdEnjoyer said a friend of theirs has to unironically tell people not to pick up anything they didn’t hit themselves.
I agree with the sentiment though, good food shouldn’t go to waste.
Yeah, I’d rather not get CWD from a deer I found dead on the road
Are we going to ignore the following:
keep the deer or bear for his own use as if the animal had been killed by that person during hunting season for the animal.” Va. Code § 29.1-539. “Compliance” means that the driver must immediately report the accident, whereupon an officer “shall view the deer or bear” to ensure that it was an accident. If the officer is satisfied, he or she may award the deer or bear to said driver.
I mean yeah. If the deer/bear was in the road the driver gets it. If the driver clearly drove out of the way to hit the deer/bear they don’t get it and potentially get a fine.
I posted it further down, but Tennessee has had this in place since 2010.
Can’t wait to get me some opossum pie! Or some fresh venison, or squirrel! Ooo doggie what a blessing in these trying times!
/s
‘Some fresh venison’ is literally hundreds of dollars of meat, so honestly go for it.
Is this how Republicans combat inflation?
Send help
Knew an RD who worked with a lot of Southern rural patients.
She would have to unironically tell them to just not eat anything they didn’t hit themselves
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Psh, they are 14 years behind. Tennessee started in 2010.
“TCA 70-4-115 allows wild game animals, except for non-game and federally protected wildlife species, accidentally killed by a motor vehicle to be possessed for personal use and consumption.”