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Fishing population getting older, smaller
By Dave Carpenter
Associated Press
August 8, 2007
CHICAGO -- Joshua Sutherland beamed in
amazement at the six-inch bluegill he had managed to reel in from a
small lagoon on one of the first casts of his young life.
"That was exciting," the 10-year-old said with a wide grin at a
clinic for fishing neophytes. "It was cool!"
Asked whether he would fish again, he hesitated and said "Probably."
For the more than $40 billion-a-year recreational fishing industry, a
lot is riding on whether kids like Joshua get hooked on the sport.

Long a favorite American outdoor activity, fishing has been slipping
in popularity as a result of competition with video games and other
options as well as the country's increased urbanization.
It's hardly a dying pastime; tens of millions of Americans still drop
hook and line fairly regularly. But you can see a trend in the mostly
older men who line the lagoon near Chicago's Lincoln Park with rod and
reel on weekend days. That is worrisome for those who love the sport or
make a living from it.
"The anglers are getting older -- they're fishing less or dying off,"
said Steve Palmisano, 49, co-owner with his brother of
Henry's Bait Shop, a South Side store started by their father in
1952. "We see some children, but not enough. We hope that they keep
tugging on their parents' coattails and saying 'Take me fishing, take me
fishing.'"
Fishing sales nationwide have stagnated, according to the results of
a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service survey released in May.
The survey, conducted every five years, found that U.S. anglers spent
$40.6 billion last year on trips, equipment, licenses and other items.
That total, based on U.S. Census Bureau interviews with 31,500 people,
was similar to 2001 but down 16 percent from 1996.
Perhaps more disturbing to those in the sport, it found a substantial
dropoff in participation from the previous two surveys. The number of
anglers declined 12 percent from five years earlier and 15 percent from
1996, with the steepest falloff -- 30 percent -- among Great Lakes
anglers.
Even in Minnesota, which Fish and Wildlife identified as the leading
state per capita in fishing participation, officials report a dramatic
drop over the last 15 years in the number of people ages 16 to 44 buying
licenses.
"The trends are showing that things are (still) downward," said Frank
Peterson, president and CEO of the Recreational Boating and Fishing
Foundation, a nonprofit founded in 1998 to try to halt the long-term
decline. "I won't kid you. We are fighting some other circumstances --
video games, and kids not being outdoors. But I think a lot has to do
with how we approach it."
Mark Damian Duda of the outdoor research group Responsive Management
in Harrisonburg, Va., said the nation's demographic shift away from
rural locations to urban ones is the biggest reason for the change, with
a related decrease in easy access to fishing spots. Then there's the
plethora of other activities luring kids and parents alike.
"Thirty years ago, people would get up and go fishing," he said. "Now
you get up and you have a soccer game at 9, a baseball game at 11, a
team picnic at 1 -- it's much more structured time. Video games also are
part of it."
It's not only businesses suffering from the decline. Revenue from
states' fishing licenses goes toward conservation, and a decline in
anglers means less money for the cause.
Brenda McKinney, a former city schoolteacher, now promotes fishing
education year-round as coordinator of the Chicago Urban Fishing Program
for the Illinois Department of Natural Resources.
"Most of the kids have never had a rod and reel in their hands" until
the clinics, she said. "I love my job. I feel like I'm making some kind
of difference."
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