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The bacon pants will be my gift to patrons of this bill. Please don’t tip them off to my secret agenda of me anticipating them being torn limb from limb by starving lobbyist savages.Gerald, this isn't 1776, but I like your spirit.
Bacon pants acceptable. But, it will attract a lower class of carnivore than you're used too attracting. There hasn't been free lunch, so lobbyists & freshman legislators will hound you like a pack of Canadian super-woofs.
What? Hank didn't seem to me the kind to buy into this landowner aristocrat BS. That's too bad.As posted on the other thread about this:
I have it from a pretty good source that the new FWP director will be testifying in support of the bill. Going to need a huge campaign to stop this bill.
As I read it section 2 of this bill allows the holder of a Class-A5 (resident OTC either-sex) or equivalent NR tag holder to indicate at the time of purchase he will use the tag on private land in an over objective to shoot a cow.
In return, he will can receive a total of 6 bonus points that can be used to apply for special permits in any district he chooses for following years.
Montana squares bonus points. If you have access to private land and exercise this option for five years you will have 900 chances to draw a permit of your choice. 5x6=30. 30x30=900
If you aren’t connected and have private access, in five years you will have 25 chances to draw a permit.
Feel free to check my math. I did six points per year for five years equals 30 base bonus points . Thirty squared is 900."As I read it section 2 of this bill..."
Is this an accurate read? It's a bit stunning to view #'s as presented.
900 over 5 years vs 25 over the same time frame?
I think you are focusing on the proper points.In my written testimony I focused on the privatization of wildlife on private ground, the wording that would allow those tags to be used unit wide and thereby increase pressure on public ground, and the creation of a second bonus point track that would effectively allow residents and wealthy non-residents to rapidly buy their way to the top of the point ladder without any real requirement to hunt or harvest a cow. It is not hard for me to see landowners or outfitters “selling” these sponsored tags to wealthy hunters who express an “intent” to hunt cows and then never even need to show up to collect their extra 5 bonus points. This would grossly disenfranchise the rest of the resident and non-resident hunting community.
On another note, is it fair to point out that the sponsor of this bill and his family may also be the greatest beneficiaries. Shouldn’t that be a major red flag to any other representative with a shred of integrity?
This point alone should've been the lead title for editorials / featured opinion articles with Missoulian, Gazette, etc.Feel free to check my math. I did six points per year for five years equals 30 base bonus points . Thirty squared is 900.
If you really want stunning, consider 3600 chances for someone who plays the game for ten years.
As you accurately note, it’s an easy defense against the charge of immediate benefit to the sponsor.I think you are focusing on the proper points.
As for the last paragraph, of the sponsor being the greatest beneficiary, the current language says "at objective." The units where the sponsor's property is located are over objective, so the sponsor would not be able to use this bill as currently written. I bring this up to avoid people basing comments on such when the easy defense is that the sponsor would not benefit as written.
Constitution of Montana -- Article IX -- ENVIRONMENT AND NATURAL RESOURCES
Section 1. Protection and improvement. (1) The state and each person shall maintain and improve a clean and healthful environment in Montana for present and future generations.
(2) The legislature shall provide for the administration and enforcement of this duty.
(3) The legislature shall provide adequate remedies for the protection of the environmental life support system from degradation and provide adequate remedies to prevent unreasonable depletion and degradation of natural resources.
Constitution of Montana -- Article IX -- ENVIRONMENT AND NATURAL RESOURCES
Section 7. Preservation of harvest heritage. The opportunity to harvest wild fish and wild game animals is a heritage that shall forever be preserved to the individual citizens of the state and does not create a right to trespass on private property or diminution of other private rights.
Yep. Also there have been several hearings so far this session where the vast majority of testimony was opposed but the majority passed it out of committee anyway. Wish I could be there but we are in the middle of calving.GG is probably giving him his marching orders.
...or you could forgo hunting a cow and assisting with the over objective elk, and still get your points.As I read it section 2 of this bill allows the holder of a Class-A5 (resident OTC either-sex) or equivalent NR tag holder to indicate at the time of purchase he will use the tag on private land in an over objective to shoot a cow.
In return, he will can receive a total of 6 bonus points that can be used to apply for special permits in any district he chooses for following years.
Montana squares bonus points. If you have access to private land and exercise this option for five years you will have 900 chances to draw a permit of your choice. 5x6=30. 30x30=900
If you aren’t connected and have private access, in five years you will have 25 chances to draw a permit.
By that time we will have eliminated elk in Breaks but it would be a nice piece of paper for artwork on the wall....or you could forgo hunting a cow and assisting with the over objective elk, and still get your points.
Hmmmm if this passes I may have to re-evaluate my NR elk purchase. I mean for 5 years, $200 a year added to my Native Deer license...900 elk points points, probably draw another breaks tag.
Probably so...but just another example of how jacked up that legislation is.By that time we will have eliminated elk in Breaks but it would be a nice piece of paper for artwork on the wall.
Yep. Were on a TV show and have a helicopter to help "round up" cattle. mtmuleyI see Wylie Galt, the bill's sponsor, owns a 640,000 acre ranch near White Sulphur Springs. Guess we can connect the dots on this one.
His property wouldn't presently qualify because Sulphur is over the FWP target population for elk. Have to be at target population to qualify. This is where I really struggle. Large land owners in the Elkhorns could qualify and thus completely crush what's been decades of work producing trophy elk.I see Wylie Galt, the bill's sponsor, owns a 640,000 acre ranch near White Sulphur Springs. Guess we can connect the dots on this one.