“We’re happy to see congress come together and wholly reject the Biden administration’s misinterpretation of the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act,” said Todd Adkins, vice president of government affairs for the Sportsmen’s Alliance. “It’s something that never should have happened, which is why we took the step of filing a lawsuit to protect our outdoor heritage should congress have failed to act.”
Mainstream media is reporting that President Biden will sign the bill and has backtracked on his own administration’s repeated interpretation of the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act (BSCA).
When Congress passed the BSCA last year, the gun-control bill contained increased funding for security and mental health resources in schools. However, the bill also included language that prohibited those federal funds from being used to purchase or to provide training for any person in the use of “dangerous weapons.” The intent of Congress was to ensure that these funds were not used for resource officer training, which comes from a different funding source.
The Department of Education determined that students receiving training or participating in any activity with any item that could be construed as a dangerous weapon would be barred from receiving federal funding. This put hunter education, archery courses, shooting sports teams and even the Sportsmen’s Alliance-created high school curriculum, Conservation Science, at risk. Indeed, with the start of the academic year, many schools had already cancelled programs out of fear of running afoul of convoluted funding laws.
In response, the Sportsmen’s Alliance Foundation, Safari Club International and Western Michigan Bowhunters took legal action to address their concerns that the Department of Education deliberately misconstrued Congress’ intent and violating the spirit and letter of the law. Co-sponsors of the BSCA have consistently asserted that the law was never intended to restrict funding for these essential programs – and interpretation and action supported by the entirety of congress.