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Environmental Articles Shortly
after Scott conducted his first tournament, he realized that his fledgling
group, as well as the entire bass industry, had a bleak future, considering
the polluted state of so many of Americas waterways at the time.
This inspired Scott to lead a two-pronged attack against water
pollution. In 1970 and 1971,
he filed more than 200 lawsuits against polluters large and small in Alabama,
Texas and Tennessee. With
lots of patience, and a great deal of help from Vice President George
Bush and cohorts from the Sportfishing Institute he obtained passage of
the Sport Fish Restoration Act, commonly known as the Wallop-Breaux Fund. Scotts most
recent crusade concerns the use of aquatic herbicides in public waters.
He believes that Control, Protection, and Management (CPM)
is the safe and sensible approach to the harvest of native and exotic
water plants. Scott is encouraging the mechanical
harvest in a surgical manner, rather than chemical poison eradication
of vital food chain supported and enhanced by such vegetation. He shares with a growing number of others a concern for the
mixing of chemical poisons in waters that are often public drinking water
sources, and was instrumental in the founding of S.M.A.R.T. (Sensible
Management of Aquatic Resources Team).
This Texas organization is a coalition of varied environmental
groups who are working together toward the abolition of chemical herbicide
poisons that are being applied to public waters.
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