National law
Hunting in Italy is regulated by a State law n. 157/92 obsolete and no longer suitable for ensuring correct management of wildlife and natural habitats. The solution to the continuous and specious attacks by animal environmentalists can be found in the proposed amendments to the Law itself already deposited in the Senate, the first signatory being Senator Bartolomeo Amedei, in support of which over 504.000 signatures have been collected and deposited. The text formally deposited in the Senate also contains the solutions to the continuous suspensions or cancellations of the regional hunting calendars by the Regional Administrative Courts which accept, often unjustifiably, the appeals of the various animal-environmental organisations.
Reorganization of ISPRA
The text of the proposed amendments to 157/92, of which we ask for rapid approval by Parliament, also provides for the reorganization of ISPRA which over the years has become a repository of anti-hunting, which must return to being a technical-scientific consultancy body for the State, the Regions and the autonomous Provinces and not, as is unfortunately happening, an anti-hunting outpost within the Institutions. Hunting, Berlato (FdI-Ecr): regulated in Italy but inadequately. “Hunting in Italy is regulated by a State Law n.157/92 which is obsolete and no longer suitable for guaranteeing correct management of the faunal heritage and natural habitats. The solution to the continuous and specious attacks by animal environmentalists is found in the proposed amendments to the Law itself already deposited in the Senate, the first signatory being Senator Bartolomeo Amedei (FdI), in support of which over 504.000 signatures have been collected and deposited" . Thus in a note the MEP of Fratelli d'Italia - Ecr Sergio Berlato.
The choices of the TAR
“In the text formally deposited in the Senate there are also solutions to the continuous suspensions or cancellations of the regional hunting calendars by the Regional Administrative Courts which accept, often unjustifiably, the appeals of the various animal-environmental organisations. The text of the proposed amendments to 157/92, of which we ask for immediate approval from Parliament, also provides for the reorganization of ISPRA which over the years has become a repository of anti-hunting, which must return to being a body of technical-scientific consultancy for the State, the Regions and the autonomous Provinces and not, as is unfortunately happening, an anti-hunting outpost within the Institutions. We therefore welcome the convening of the wildlife-hunting committee announced by Minister Lollobrigida as the first step to resolve the issue" (source: ACR).