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Do you mean to say that if the LO transfers(sells,gives,whatever)the tag, the receiving party would have a forfeiture of some/all points? or would it be better to restrict that tag to the property of the LO or PP?
I kinda like that idea. I could just hear the bellyaching from the LO/Ag crowd.
I am 7th generation colorado
Hunting only on the LO property would make them go crazy.
I just need to find a landowner who can't get rid of his/her mule deer LO tag... every year... until I die...
Wouldn't that also increase their P-R monies as well?Has anyone taken the time to run the numbers on how much money will be generated by ''Force''sales of NR fishing licenses? It should be a pretty nice chunk of change.
Numbers for you guys. Colorado generated approx. 60 million dollars last year from hunting and fishing. 52 million of that was from non-residents. Considering the debt that this country is in and the problems that that is causing I cant say I blame them.
Where did you get that number from? Thats not whats shown on the annual reports. Of a $198+ million CPW budget ($142 Mil Wildlife side), Nonresident hunting & fishing licenses are approx $42 million. A significant portion, but you are cheating residents out of what they pay. Sounds like a touch of emotions are inflating the number to me. And what does the debt at the federal level have to do with the CPW? The two are unrelated
Of course that's not what is shown on annual reports. Where did you get the $198M CPW budget from?
Final numbers won't be available until next year, but the initial figures are a positive sign for Colorado's $1.8 billion hunting and fishing industry. The significance is magnified within CPW, the agency charged with managing the state's wildlife resources. It draws a significant portion of its operating budget from nonresident big game licenses. The division last year collected $38 million in elk and deer licenses from nonresidents, compared with $7.6 million from in-state hunters.
The biggest revenue generators are nonresident elk licenses, both the $589 limited licenses hunters must apply for and $586 over-the-counter licenses that become available later in the summer. By comparison, a limited elk hunting license for adult Colorado residents costs only $49, and over-the-counter resident licenses are $46.
"Again, we don't have the final figures, but we know that our net sales dollars are up as well. Pretty substantially," Hampton said. "Based on that, your gut tells you that nonresident licenses were either stable or up as well. There certainly wasn't a significant decline because a large number would be noticed on the end result."
Wouldn't that also increase their P-R monies as well?
Where did you get that number from? Thats not whats shown on the annual reports. Of a $198+ million CPW budget ($142 Mil Wildlife side), Nonresident hunting & fishing licenses are approx $42 million. A significant portion, but you are cheating residents out of what they pay. Sounds like a touch of emotions are inflating the number to me. And what does the debt at the federal level have to do with the CPW? The two are unrelated
Pisses me off that the state is making that much money and I can't even draw a 2nd, 3rd, or 4th choice deer tag that take 0 points to draw :hump:
show me a local or state government in this country that isn't in debt up to their ears
Where did you get that number from? Thats not whats shown on the annual reports. Of a $198+ million CPW budget ($142 Mil Wildlife side), Nonresident hunting & fishing licenses are approx $42 million. A significant portion, but you are cheating residents out of what they pay. Sounds like a touch of emotions are inflating the number to me. And what does the debt at the federal level have to do with the CPW? The two are unrelated