Iowa public trust resource for sale

Pucky Freak

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The Iowa legislative session is Jan-Apr annually, and like clockwork, lawmakers hit the ground running with bills to repay their donors: IA Farm Bureau, and out-of-state campaign donors: individuals and weapons manufacturers. The currency of the quid pro quo repayment is Iowa's finite natural resources. The relentless assault on this resource from the legislature is opposed reasonably well by the Iowa Conservation Alliance, which represents numerous Iowa conservation organizations who pool together to pay a lobbyist to stay abreast of legislative proposals and promote and preserve natural resources for the enjoyment of all Iowans. https://www.facebook.com/people/Iowa-Conservation-Alliance/100064550302372/

Below are descriptions of 3 questionable natural resources bills, followed by some discussion. Anyone who is willing to contact elected officials with input, this is welcome and appreciated. Lists of whom to contact are provided, and I will plan to update this thread throughout the spring. Links to the bills are found here: https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/billTracking @Gellar always has helpful insight on these topics as well.

SF 175 Crossbows valid on vertical bow deer tags. Ravin Crossbows persistently funds political campaigns in order to try and expand its market share. This strategy has been very successful in other eastern states and Iowa sits firmly in it's crosshairs as a holdout. If passed, buck age class is expected to decline in line with what is seen in neighboring states of IL and WI where vertical bows are no longer distinguished from crossbows. The bill also puts more pressure on public lands with additional crossbow hunters on the landscape. Iowa has 8 deer seasons Sept-Jan and there is an overabundance of hunting opportunity as it is.

Status: Passed by NR subcommittee today. Forwarded to the Natural Resources and Environment Senate committee. Committee members emails and phone numbers at https://www.legis.iowa.gov/committees/committee?ga=90&groupID=699

SF 145 Rifle turkey season. My guess is campaign contribution by a weapon manufacturer. Turkey populations are on the decline in most places in IA for multiple reasons, a significant one being recent population increases of egg-eating predators including raccoons, opossums, badgers, and skunks. IA already has 7 turkey seasons and there is plentiful hunting opportunity with a 4-bird limit per hunter. We need less pressure on the resource, not more.

Status: No subcommittee assigned yet. Contact bill sponsor https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislators/legislator?ga=90&personID=6588

SF 42 Add +3000 NR deer tags. Recent hot trend is NR's buying up Iowa recreational land. New wealthy owners' patience grows thin in not being able to buy buck tags to hunt their property every year. Out-of-state campaign contributions to IA legislators grease the wheels to get the laws changed to accomplish this. I am for NR deer hunting opportunity in IA, but it needs to match the available resource. The scarcest resource in the deer hunting equation in Iowa is publicly accessible huntable habitat. Iowa ranks 49 of 50 in states for percentage of land that is open to public hunting. We also have just 8% of total land in timber and 76% of our total land is bare dirt or corn stubble after the crops are harvested. An extra +3000 NR deer tags every year might not sound like a lot, but it can have an outsized impact on public land hunting pressure.

Status: Passed by NR subcommittee. Forwarded to the Natural Resources and Environment Senate committee. Committee members emails and phone numbers at https://www.legis.iowa.gov/committees/committee?ga=90&groupID=699
 
The Iowa legislative session is Jan-Apr annually, and like clockwork, lawmakers hit the ground running with bills to repay their donors: IA Farm Bureau, and out-of-state campaign donors: individuals and weapons manufacturers. The currency of the quid pro quo repayment is Iowa's finite natural resources. The relentless assault on this resource from the legislature is opposed reasonably well by the Iowa Conservation Alliance, which represents numerous Iowa conservation organizations who pool together to pay a lobbyist to stay abreast of legislative proposals and promote and preserve natural resources for the enjoyment of all Iowans. https://www.facebook.com/people/Iowa-Conservation-Alliance/100064550302372/

Below are descriptions of 3 questionable natural resources bills, followed by some discussion. Anyone who is willing to contact elected officials with input, this is welcome and appreciated. Lists of whom to contact are provided, and I will plan to update this thread throughout the spring. Links to the bills are found here: https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/billTracking @Gellar always has helpful insight on these topics as well.

SF 175 Crossbows valid on vertical bow deer tags. Ravin Crossbows persistently funds political campaigns in order to try and expand its market share. This strategy has been very successful in other eastern states and Iowa sits firmly in it's crosshairs as a holdout. If passed, buck age class is expected to decline in line with what is seen in neighboring states of IL and WI where vertical bows are no longer distinguished from crossbows. The bill also puts more pressure on public lands with additional crossbow hunters on the landscape. Iowa has 8 deer seasons Sept-Jan and there is an overabundance of hunting opportunity as it is.

Status: Passed by NR subcommittee today. Forwarded to the Natural Resources and Environment Senate committee. Committee members emails and phone numbers at https://www.legis.iowa.gov/committees/committee?ga=90&groupID=699

SF 145 Rifle turkey season. My guess is campaign contribution by a weapon manufacturer. Turkey populations are on the decline in most places in IA for multiple reasons, a significant one being recent population increases of egg-eating predators including raccoons, opossums, badgers, and skunks. IA already has 7 turkey seasons and there is plentiful hunting opportunity with a 4-bird limit per hunter. We need less pressure on the resource, not more.

Status: No subcommittee assigned yet. Contact bill sponsor https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislators/legislator?ga=90&personID=6588

SF 42 Add +3000 NR deer tags. Recent hot trend is NR's buying up Iowa recreational land. New wealthy owners' patience grows thin in not being able to buy buck tags to hunt their property every year. Out-of-state campaign contributions to IA legislators grease the wheels to get the laws changed to accomplish this. I am for NR deer hunting opportunity in IA, but it needs to match the available resource. The scarcest resource in the deer hunting equation in Iowa is publicly accessible huntable habitat. Iowa ranks 49 of 50 in states for percentage of land that is open to public hunting. We also have just 8% of total land in timber and 76% of our total land is bare dirt or corn stubble after the crops are harvested. An extra +3000 NR deer tags every year might not sound like a lot, but it can have an outsized impact on public land hunting pressure.

Status: Passed by NR subcommittee. Forwarded to the Natural Resources and Environment Senate committee. Committee members emails and phone numbers at https://www.legis.iowa.gov/committees/committee?ga=90&groupID=699
Thanks for the heads up! I will read into all of these and comment as I see fit in the next day or two. To be honest, my attention has been on some local county political stuff going on with public lands and I haven’t had time to pay attention on a statewide scale.
 
I'm pretty rabidly anti-crossbow. I can lobby against that, not that it matters a whit.

But where in Iowa could you get 4 turkeys? Only 2 in the spring and one in the fall, no?

I know they are intending or have already lowered the gauge and shot size requirements so the 90+ yd TSS loads in .410s and the like are going to be the new hot thing. Spring turkey is definitely endangered by that.
 
1 archery, 1 shotgun?
HOW MANY TURKEY LICENSES MAY I HAVE? A resident hunter may obtain a maximum of two fall turkey hunting licenses: two Combination Gun/Bow Licenses, or two Archery-only Licenses, or one Combination Gun/Bow License and one Archery-only License. One of these licenses may be a Landowner-Tenant License if the hunter is eligible.
 
I am opposed to all 3 of the bills, but to be honest, there is so much shit that the Governor and the Farm Bureau Republicans are trying to pull and have been pulling with the DNR that it is mind boggling.

SF175. It looks like they may have changed the verbage on this yesterday, 02/02/23 The only thing I see talking about cross bows is being able to use them in the January antlerless season which is only in counties with 100 or more unsold antlerless deer tags after January 10. https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=90&ba=sf175

sf145 This bill will allow you to use a .17 hmr during turkey season. I am not a ballistic expert but unless you head shot a turkey I think that you are going to have a hard time recovering a bird if you body shot it with a .17hmr. As we have talked about in other threads turkeys are declining across their entire range. If there was any change to turkey hunting in Iowa I would like to see the number of turkeys allowed limited to 1 tom per year and no hens in the fall. I would not be opposed to a law making reaping illegal as well. https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=90&ba=sf145

sf42 Last year there were approximatley 5,536 any sex tags for nonresidents (3537 gun, 2099 archery) They are proposing to raise it to 7,500 any sex tags with only 35% (525 additional tags) of the additional tags being archery only tags. They do not say how the tags will be divided among the 9 nonresident units. Something that I would find offensive if I was a nonresident collecting points to hunt deer in Iowa in this bill is that it is proposed that if a nonresident buys a nonresident antlerless tag and harvests a doe they will be issued an additional point. A person who does this could theoretically get 2 preference points in a year and jump ahead in line in the units that take the most points. I think it is funny that the bill was originally written to up the total tags to 6,500 but the six was struck through and replaced with seven, kind of like someone said you can do better than that, try for 7,500. https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=90&ba=sf42



It is very clear to me what they are doing, increasing tag sales to increase the budget of the Dnr. Which in turn increases the budget but yet they keep cutting services. Law enforcement is a good example. No more park rangers but now they are park managers, no law enforcement authority. The Conservation officers are saying they are not patrolling parks because they are already stretched to thin. So the sherriffs office are having to respond to calls inside state parks and state forests. The Conservation Officers are also not enforcing ATV laws, as you all probably know ATVS are allowed on all county roads whether they are paved or gravel. The DOT takes the registration fees for ATVS and the DNR does not want to enforce the laws unless they are getting the money for the registrations.

Bureaus inside the Dnr are being cut, for example forestry, has merged with parks. Now instead of doing active forest management at state forests and managing the state forest nurseries the forestry techs are managing campgrounds and making hiking trails and cleaning outhouses. Hunters Safety has also changed, the hunters safety instructors first point of contact was always the Conservation Officer or the Safety Officer and the hunters safety program was in the law enforcement bureau of the DNR. Now it is in the communication bureau and Conservation Officers have no control over the hunters safety programs, even though they are required for federal funding through the Pitman Robertson Act to participate in the class.

But possibly of even more significance is the rumor that is swirling around that the DNR may be dissolved all together and become part of the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Lands.
 
I had no idea about any of this. Is it still being discussed? Gun season was absolutely insane around me this past shotgun seasons
 
I thought I would check on these bills today and noticed that Klimesh is the author of sf sf42 proposing to give more nonresident deer licenses away. He is also my legislature in NE Iowa. In the past he has been very vocal about not allowing the DNR and County Conservation Boards to buy more land at fair market value or even receiving land as a donation from a private landowner. His reason was/is that he wanted to buy a neighboring parcel to his property but was outbid by the DNR, it was actually Iowa Natural Heritage Foundation. What does he think that adding nonresident licenses and working towards no cap on NR deer licenses is going to do prices of recreational property?
 
SF175. It looks like they may have changed the verbage on this yesterday, 02/02/23 The only thing I see talking about cross bows is being able to use them in the January antlerless season which is only in counties with 100 or more unsold antlerless deer tags after January 10. https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=90&ba=sf175
The new verbage is pretty tame. While I am still not in favor of "crossbow creep", I don't really care if the archery bow tag converts to a crossbow antlerless tag for the late Jan season. I can't imagine too many persons utilizing this anyways, since anyone can just buy a late Jan antlerless permit for $15 and hunt it with a crossbow anyways. My guess is the entire point of the bill, now renumbered SF208 is just a nod to Ravin at this point.

SF 145 Rifle turkey season. 2/14/23 assigned to subcommittee: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]
 
The new verbage is pretty tame. While I am still not in favor of "crossbow creep", I don't really care if the archery bow tag converts to a crossbow antlerless tag for the late Jan season. I can't imagine too many persons utilizing this anyways, since anyone can just buy a late Jan antlerless permit for $15 and hunt it with a crossbow anyways. My guess is the entire point of the bill, now renumbered SF208 is just a nod to Ravin at this point.

SF 145 Rifle turkey season. 2/14/23 assigned to subcommittee: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]
You give them an inch and they take a mile.
 
Here is a list of bills that the Iowa County Conservation System and the Iowa Natural Heritage Foundation are tracking. https://www.ialobby.com/billtracker/iccs#

I hadn't had time to look very closely so I apologize for that. Besides the three bills that were talked about above by @Pucky Freak there are some very concerning bills relating to conservation. I bit the bullet on this and did not see some of these in time for comment.

HF 103 https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=90&ba=HF103 allows the governor to issue up to 10 permits annually for economic development projects that would encroach on or use lands managed by the DNR.

sf 275 https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=90&ba=SF275 takes responsibility off of people who offer private land for public recreation use to provide an area that is safe from danger. It only talks about hiking and biking. Not hunting or fishing, which a lot of trout streams in NE Iowa are on private ground but the public is allowed to fish them.

SF22 https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=90&ba=SF22 allows for veterans with disabilities to receive a lifetime hunting and fishing license

SSB1143 https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=90&ba=SSB1143 If I am reading this right it will require all boards established by the state to be dissolved. All 99 counties in Iowa have a County Conservation Board. All counties are required to have a CCB and at least a director. This was required by legislation in 1989 when the REAP program was formed. All counties CCBs are different but most employ 3-10 employees ranging from conservation to education and they manage 1000-2,500 acres in the county for public use including hunting and fishing.

HF 312 https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=90&ba=HF312 raises the registration fee for some watercraft and requires others to have registration. Right now any nonmotorized craft under 12'6" does not have to be registered. Currently most of this money goes into a fund to improve access for these sports called WRAC (Water Recreation ACCESS Cost-Share) which allows counties and cities to apply for grants to improve or build these areas.
 
I went to a dnr public meeting for hunting regulations in Decorah tonight. Some good comments, but a lot of them were ridiculous. The best was a split squirrel season, closing it from the end of October to shotgun 1 because the commenter has had to many deer hunts ruined by hmungs.

The dnr will be proposing extending the trapping season by 1 month and making raccoons continuous.

I took an interesting picture of this slide showing furbearer harvest.
1677208444100.jpeg
 
Id be in favor of the continuous raccoon season but not the split squirrel. My kids and I love getting out there for them critters
The continuous raccoon season was proposed by the DNR while the split squirrel season was not. It was proposed by an individual during public comment and it was only to be on public ground in Allamakee and Winneshiek counties where every squirrel season their is a large number of hmung hunters from out of state. We could go into a whole discussion about that matter, but the comment was taken in stride and noted. Nothing will come of it.

I would be in favor of extending the squirrel season like some states that go into the Spring. During the biologists report there was talk of the lower fox squirrel populations and talk of not suitable habitat in areas where a decline has been seen.

A gentleman spoke against the continuous trapping season because of waste and the pelts not being worth anything but several people voiced their approval of the continuous trapping season because of nest predation and would like it to be extended to other nest predators such as skunks and opossums.

One gentlemen commented that he would like the crossbow bill that is currently being proposed extended to the whole season for anyone over 65 automatically gets to use a cross bow. Another person commented they were not in favor of the .17hmr for turkey hunting.

There were several comments about waterfowl season mostly from two individuals. One person would like to see the season extended to January because that is when the ducks are present and one person would like to see the limit of geese increased. The Biologist did a good job explaining how waterfowl seasons and bag limits are set by the feds limited to 60 days. Iowa can only set the seasons in accordance with those regulations.
 
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