Nebraska Lion Season

wyoming556

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Jul 11, 2010
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I keep hoping this turns into a season. There are several lions close to my house that I'd like to chase. Looks like the non residents will have to buy a tag through an auction while residents will be in a drawing. I"d rather see a quota hunt like South Dakota myself.

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska lawmakers passed a bill Wednesday that would allow for mountain lion hunting and create a state program that lets hunters donate deer meat to the hungry.
The proposals mixed into one bill won final approval, 49-0.

Ellsworth Sen. LeRoy Louden introduced the mountain lion hunting bill in response to increased sightings in Nebraska. Current state law only allows people to kill mountain lions if they are threatening humans or livestock.

State officials say the mountain lion population is increasing, although the number of lions is estimated at fewer than 60 statewide. If the population continues to grow, Game and Parks could create a limited hunting season that would likely allow up to four lions to be taken per year.

The animals are native to Nebraska but were eradicated by settlers in the late 1800s. In recent years, biologists have confirmed a small population or about 20 breeding mountain lions in far northwest Nebraska. Nebraska officials have confirmed more than 50 sightings outside of the Pine Ridge, including some as far east as South Sioux City and Omaha.

Under the bill, Nebraska residents would pay $25 for a chance to win a mountain lion hunting permit in a random drawing. Nonresidents would be able to get a permit through an auction.

That measure was combined with a deer meat donation proposal by Lincoln Sen. Tony Fulton. It would require the state Game and Parks Commission to create a program that allows hunters to donate money and deer meat to the Hunters Helping the Hungry Cash Fund.

Hunters would be asked to give part of their permit fees to the fund. That money, and other donations, would reimburse meat processors who would get the meat ready for consumption.

The bill has drawn support from ranchers, sportsmen, meat processors and a homeless shelter director who would benefit from the donation program. Iowa, Kansas, South Dakota and Colorado all have meat donation programs.

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The bill is LB928
 
Still moving forward. Glad to see the quota type hunt being an option for NGP instead of a drawing for a limited number of tags tags.


The Nebraska Game and Parks now has the legal backing to institute a mountain lion hunting season should its officials determine that numbers are large enough to warrant one.

The Nebraska Legislature unanimously approved Senator LeRoy Louden’s LB928 April 11, and Governor Dave Heineman has signed it in to law.

Louden sponsored the bill in response to increased numbers of sightings of the animals in the Panhandle, where he lives. Lions were categorized as a “game” animal under state statute, but the laws were never changed to include ways to control the population, he explained.

The bill will allow the Game and Parks to open a hunting season on mountain lions at any time in the future when the agency deems the numbers of the animals high enough to support a season.


“We got a lot of stuff from people all over the world wanting to protect the big cats.” In the Legislature, however, senators understood the situation and the parameters of the bill and there wasn’t much debate over the issue.


LB928 allows for the Game and Parks to establish a season and charge residents up to $25, nonrefundable, to enter a random drawing for a lion permit. No additional permit fee will be charged. The law also allows the agency to auction off one additional permit on which both residents and nonresidents could bid.

Wilson said the bill differs from the law that allows a bighorn sheep season. With sheep, one permit is awarded to harvest one sheep because the success rate of hunting that animal is so high.

“Mountain lions are different because they are spread out and their territories range so far,” Wilson said.

The law would allow the Game and Parks to issue more permits than the number of animals to be harvested. Under that system, hunters would have to check in to daily to see if the quota had been reached, which is how South Dakota manages its lion season.



Read more: http://rapidcityjournal.com/news/lo...8c6-11e1-a38a-0019bb2963f4.html#ixzz1sQnQf4h1
 
Hope you guys get your season

Too bad States dont let Bio's manage the wildlife like their paid to do
 

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