WY preference point increase

And still cheaper than OR, AZ, and UT for a NR that only wants to buy points.

True story.

This is a smart move for the state. The negative impact (if any) of this is likely to be felt more by surrounding states than Wyoming itself imo.
 
Considering that they sell 180K-190K points to NRs for each of the elk, deer, and pronghorn draws, this is a smart business decision. The same inventory of tags sold results in $13-14million of annual non-resident revenue, per species, without a single extra critter being harvested and not a single extra set of non-resident boots competing with residents.

When you have a superior product like Wyoming has, this pricing model is very smart on their part, even if it costs NRs a chunk of change to keep their place in line. Some states could follow the WY model, but I'm not sure they have the same mix of quality/opportunity that WY has created, so the results in other states might not be the same.

At this point in my life, I'll pay the fee. They have finally priced me out of bison in Wyoming, so I guess I'll reallocate some of that bison credit card processing fee to keep my place in line for Wyoming elk/deer/pronghorn.
 
Considering that they sell 180K-190K points to NRs for each of the elk, deer, and pronghorn draws, this is a smart business decision. The same inventory of tags sold results in $13-14million of annual non-resident revenue, per species, without a single extra critter being harvested and not a single extra set of non-resident boots competing with residents.

When you have a superior product like Wyoming has, this pricing model is very smart on their part, even if it costs NRs a chunk of change to keep their place in line. Some states could follow the WY model, but I'm not sure they have the same mix of quality/opportunity that WY has created, so the results in other states might not be the same.

At this point in my life, I'll pay the fee. They have finally priced me out of bison in Wyoming, so I guess I'll reallocate some of that bison credit card processing fee to keep my place in line for Wyoming elk/deer/pronghorn.
Should state agencies be operating like a business in that way though? What they're selling isn't a product, it's a public resource that they are stewarding. I tend to think that licenses and other fees should be set according to what it costs to manage the resource not what they can get out of it based on market values for a "product". I would much rather they came out and said that their costs as an agency have increased or they want to implement some new habitat work or research and the cost increase in NR points is directly tied to covering those costs. Instead, this feels like raising fees just because they can and they'll figure out how to spend it later. I don't know, maybe I'm thinking about it all wrong, but I just don't think a public resource should be managed like a commodity.

That said, I'm still going to stay in the game in Wyoming for D/E/A.
 
I would much rather they came out and said that their costs as an agency have increased or they want to implement some new habitat work or research and the cost increase in NR points is directly tied to covering those costs.
They did.
Instead, this feels like raising fees just because they can and they'll figure out how to spend it later. I don't know, maybe I'm thinking about it all wrong, but I just don't think a public resource should be managed like a commodity.
You are.
 

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