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This isn’t gonna be like scrolling thru Amazon and picking up an elk tag.
So the rich have already figured a way to get their tags every year then right?20% of tags in Colorado go to landowners, many of whom don't support enough animals with their property to justify getting those tags. This is Colorado's system, and it limits the total tags that can go to landowners
Wyoming is planning to increase the minimum acreage necessary to apply for landowner tags, making it for very large landowners only.
Wyoming has no cap on their percentage of tags that can go to landowners.
Many high demand Wyoming units already have almost their entire nonresident quota going to nonresident landowners, despite there being plenty of public land in the unit. Some units also have significant portions of their resident quota going to landowners. Imagine if those landowner tags become transferable? DIY hunting will dwindle, making federal public lands "unnecessary."
Residents should probably get on this quick.
Should I answer this or actually let them do the digging and figure it out on their own?What do most landowners do with their tags right now?
I give them away or trade for help or firewood. I use one for myself if I don't draw.Source? Have you ever really dug into NM or CO and what happens to those tags? You might be shocked at what you find.... @hank4elk where do your elk tags go?
So if the law had a stipulation that if you receive landowner tags you no longer are eligible for damage payments it would remove concerns people have about the "landowners making big $$$ off of the wildlife"
You should answer.Should I answer this or actually let them do the digging and figure it out on their own?
Isn't it $16 per elk harvested on their property through the "landowner coupon" program?From the article:
"That includes organizations willing to help ranchers recoup losses for such things as forage eaten by wildlife and damage to ranch property, without requiring public access in return, she [Jess Johnson] said.
I have a pretty good idea of what crop damage payouts look like in WI regarding the elk herd in the Jackson County area. Can anyone provide some context or numbers to what it looks like in WY?
I'm very curious because the amount of a landowner elk tag wouldn't even remotely come close to what the crop damage payment that a WI farmer with 80 acres of corn gets. So if the law had a stipulation that if you receive landowner tags you no longer are eligible for damage payments it would remove concerns people have about the "landowners making big $$$ off of the wildlife"
Reset preference points with the purchase of a landowner tags.
95% of them aren't being sold to the highest bidder. A lot go to family and friends or the landowner uses them themselves. In NM at least, there is a sizable portion that are directly sold to outfitters at a contracted price which if you do the math of what the outfitter is charging for the hunts, it is not a very large amount. Some quality outfitted hunts in NM are in the 6-12k range and obviously the outfitter has a lot of expenses and needs to still turn a profit so those tags are being sold to the outfitter for likely 3-6k?You should answer.
Right now, non-transferable landowner tags are a private benefit with public impact. There's just less opportunity for western hunters without tags being available to purchase.
Let's say theres 3,000 landowner elk tags being given out each year. That could potentially be 3,000 less people applying for tags every year. Reset preference points with the purchase of a landowner tags.
95% of them aren't being sold to the highest bidder.
Thanks for that.If LO get transferable tags they can do the outfitting themselves in Wyoming. They do not have top be licenses to outfit their own land.
Here's a report from 2022 I think: https://wyoleg.gov/InterimCommittee/2023/05-202309112-01WGFDDamageSummaryFINALFY2022.pdf
I haven’t, but I am fairly certain there are not 8 million people in Wyoming.
Thanks for that.
So in 2022, average of $18,190 total cost per claim that came out of the budget. So wouldn't a program set with rules where it would instead reduce this cash flow coming out of the budget and instead put money into the budget be better? The sale of the LO tag could be directly handled by the state if they wanted (where they could collect a fee on the transaction) plus the LO needs to claim the payment on their taxes which would also put money back into the budget. Can also force the LO that they need to open their land up year round to public use. Lots of ways to turn this into something of benefit to the state and the people of the state to enjoy the wildlife.
95% of them aren't being sold to the highest bidder. A lot go to family and friends or the landowner uses them themselves. In NM at least, there is a sizable portion that are directly sold to outfitters at a contracted price which if you do the math of what the outfitter is charging for the hunts, it is not a very large amount. Some quality outfitted hunts in NM are in the 6-12k range and obviously the outfitter has a lot of expenses and needs to still turn a profit so those tags are being sold to the outfitter for likely 3-6k?
This leads to an absolute boom to each tax payer of $6.67.
The tag cost was going to be $12,500. I shopped around for bull tags and this was pretty standard.