Bow-hunting returns to Reston, Virginia, after the State Supreme Court sided with ATA and local bow-hunters in their battle to bow-hunt deer in their back-yard woods. The decision also awards ATA more than $50,000 in legal fees. In a ruling likely to provide a national precedent, the Virginia Supreme Court in mid-July upheld a lower court’s ruling that bow-hunting is a safe, science-based tool of wildlife management, and that local authorities cannot stop citizens from bow-hunting deer on their property when hunting itself is a right conferred by the state’s Constitution. The High Court, in choosing not to hear an appeal by the Reston Homeowners Association, also upheld the Fairfax County court’s decision to allow the Archery Trade Association to recover all legal fees incurred during the dispute. After being alerted to the dispute by Suburban Whitetail Management of Northern Virginia (SWMNV), the ATA brought legal action against the Reston Homeowners Association in January 2007. ATA won the case in Fairfax County court in December 2007, as well as its request to recover more than $50,000 in legal fees. And because the homeowners’ association appealed to the Supreme Court and lost, the ATA is now seeking to recover legal fees incurred by the appeal process. In total, the ATA stands to recover all of its legal costs from having to defend bow-hunting. McAninch said the Virginia Supreme Court reinforces four critical points that form the foundation of bow-hunting in America: "We’re extremely gratified to win a ruling of such stature," McAninch said."This sets a strong precedent in Virginia and elsewhere. Virginia’s long-standing approach to urban deer problems is to use bow-hunting whenever possible. Bow-hunters in Reston were part of that solution and had a proven track record. |