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GAME COMMISSION LOSES BUILDING AT GAME FARM TO FIRE
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Fire destroyed one of four brooder houses used in pheasant propagation at the Pennsylvania Game Commission's Loyalsock Game Farm near Montoursville, Lycoming County, yesterday afternoon. One employee was slightly injured when he attempted to use a fire extinguisher from the burning building to combat the fire.

The building was empty, as agency Game Farm workers had been preparing it to house about 18,000 day-old pheasant chicks that will hatch on May 29, so no animals were in the building at the time of the fire.

According to preliminary reports, it is believed that the fire was caused by an electrical short in a brooder heating unit, which is used to warm the building prior to placing the pheasant chicks inside and to keep the newly-hatched pheasants warm in the early stages of their lives. No damage estimates are available at this time, but the agency does plan to replace the building and equipment prior to next year's pheasant production season.

"We will raise these chicks at the Game Commission's nearby Northcentral Game Farm, and we do not anticipate any reduction in the agency's production goal of 100,000 pheasants for release prior and during the 2007 pheasant seasons," said Calvin W. DuBrock, Game Commission Bureau of Wildlife Management director, who oversees the pheasant propagation division.

On Aug. 1, 1934, the Game Commission opened the Loyalsock Game Farm, and its operations were dedicated for pheasant propagation. The brooder building lost in the fire was about 40-feet wide by 210-feet long, and was constructed in 1975.

Created in 1895 as an independent state agency, the Game Commission is responsible for conserving and managing all wild birds and mammals in the Commonwealth, establishing hunting seasons and bag limits, enforcing hunting and trapping laws, and managing habitat on the 1.4 million acres of State Game Lands it has purchased over the years with hunting and furtaking license dollars to safeguard wildlife habitat. The agency also conducts numerous wildlife conservation programs for schools, civic organizations and sportsmen's clubs.

The Game Commission does not receive any general state taxpayer dollars for its annual operating budget. The agency is funded by license sales revenues; the state's share of the federal Pittman-Robertson program, which is an excise tax collected through the sale of sporting arms and ammunition; and monies from the sale of oil, gas, coal, timber and minerals derived from State Game Lands.

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