Labman
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 21, 2015
- Messages
- 537
Yep. That sucks. Some great bulls over there too.A NR landowner can't get a ND elk tag. I do know that for a fact, because I am a NR landowner with a LO elk permit eligible ranch.
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Yep. That sucks. Some great bulls over there too.A NR landowner can't get a ND elk tag. I do know that for a fact, because I am a NR landowner with a LO elk permit eligible ranch.
If youre a NR DIY guy ive got no idea why youd be for 635.Isn't the fact that the licenses obtained via HB 635 are only valid on the tag holder's private land a fairly significant detail that should be noted (i.e. there are strings attached)? As a BHA member and Montana NR DIY hunter undecided on the matter it'd be nice to be provided the full picture. It's pretty clear to me that this detail is being purposely omitted to make HB 635 appear worse than it is. I'm not necessarily saying that HB 635 is a great bill but it'd be nice to have organizations you support provide all the facts.
Also, I fail to see how the $5 bonus point fee hike could not just be a separate bill instead of a reason to pass HB 907.
This is 100% accurate. The fact that they can only hunt private land is a big piece that seems to get left out conveniently. 907 seems like a poorly pieced together bill that does very little.Isn't the fact that the licenses obtained via HB 635 are only valid on the tag holder's private land a fairly significant detail that should be noted (i.e. there are strings attached)? As a BHA member and Montana NR DIY hunter undecided on the matter it'd be nice to be provided the full picture. It's pretty clear to me that this detail is being purposely omitted to make HB 635 appear worse than it is. I'm not necessarily saying that HB 635 is a great bill but it'd be nice to have organizations you support provide all the facts.
Also, I fail to see how the $5 bonus point fee hike could not just be a separate bill instead of a reason to pass HB 907.
You are misunderstanding - also can hunt leased public and theres literally not one way to know if someone should or should not be on their own land.This is 100% accurate. The fact that they can only hunt private land is a big piece that seems to get left out conveniently. 907 seems like a poorly pieced together bill that does very little.
I don’t see how this statement is accurate. The entire Bill is focused on NR LOs. It literally puts R LOs at a disadvantage in the LO draw.…HB 907 aids resident ranchers, …
I follow what you mean - i hadnt connected the dots that the LO pool is in one place (r and nr) until 10% have drawn.I don’t see how this statement is accurate. The entire Bill is focused on NR LOs. It literally puts R LOs at a disadvantage in the LO draw.
I’m all for the Bill if it is amended to provide the same incentive (additional BP if enrolled in an access program) to R LOs.
I’ve emailed, texted, and signed up to provide comment.I follow what you mean - i hadnt connected the dots that the LO pool is in one place (r and nr) until 10% have drawn.
Please write the comittee and seek the amendment.
You've pretty much ignored my main point which is that a key detail of HB 635 is being strategically omitted to argue in favor of HB 907. Whether HB 907 is a better bill is a different matter entirely. My main point is that I'd appreciate (particularly as a BHA member) to feel like I'm not being misinformed when trying to make a decision (not that I have much to do on this particular bill as a NR).If youre a NR DIY guy ive got no idea why youd be for 635.
Under 635:
2500 acre NR LO skip preference points and can "hunt their own property" including leased public land. Note that a majority of ranches for sale in MT over 2500 acres lease some public land. However - this is plainly not enforceable in any fashion and notably no means of verification of that was included in 635 originally. The NR LO using this program directly take from the tags allocated to you as a NR up to 2550 elk gen tags.
Under 907:
No way around PP and getting a license except enrolling in block management with an option to purchase an extra bonus point (that has significant value if theyre applying for a LO permit in their district). The landowners enrolling in this do not directly count against the cap of NR.
Although as R, i dont want more NR tags (no offense) if we are to award above the cap a NR enrolled in BMA is one i dont mind rewarding above the cap.
Ultimately - theres two ways to improve crowding, reduce hunters or grow huntable acreage. 635 over sells a reducing hunters at the expense of NR diy opportunity and 907 (repeal and replace) focuses on adding huntable acreage.
As far as the benefit - reduced competition in land purchasing is huge imho. All kinds of ranches have major value based on their hunting opportunities (wildlife) and are marketed as such.I don’t see how this statement is accurate.
I addressed that, and pointed out that its a farce for 2 reasons. 1. They can also hunt public land that was leased (for cattle, as example). 2. Theres literally no way to even check/verify that they are or should be on their own property. The intent of the legislation is to have them hunt their own property - but its just words in a book without some enforcement mechanism.You've pretty much ignored my main point which is that a key detail of HB 635 is being strategically omitted to argue in favor of HB 907. Whether HB 907 is a better bill is a different matter entirely. My main point is that I'd appreciate (particularly as a BHA member) to feel like I'm not being misinformed when trying to make a decision (not that I have much to do on this particular bill as a NR).
I'd also question the logic that HB 635 incentivizes subdividing but HB 907 does not. Even if a bonus point does not guaranteed anything it still has value that could incentivize owning exactly 640 acres. Now, perhaps HB 907 will not incentivize subdividing because a bonus point is not much return on opening up your property to the the free-for-all that occurs on many BM properties (not that I don't appreciate BM for what it is and could be).
I follow what you mean - i hadnt connected the dots that the LO pool is in one place (r and nr) until 10% have drawn.
Please write the comittee and seek the amendment.
Explain how you enforce a 635 nr land owner hunting their own property.There’s also the potential for these LO’s with additional bonus points to forego the LO preference pool and apply for permits in direct competition with other DIY NR’s and R’s until the 10% NR cap is reached.
Within the LO preference pool the max amount of tags NR landowners can draw is 1.5% of total tags.
(10% of 15%)
I’m sure there will be some units where the math works better if they apply in the regular pool for up to 10% of total tags.
I would love to see that. NR LOs have significantly better odds than R - let alone NR who dont own land.I’m sure there will be some units where the math works better if they apply in the regular pool for up to 10% of total tags.
Explain how you enforce a 635 nr land owner hunting their own property.
Okay. Why does 635 award NR LOs an extra BP and R LOs nothing? Thats relevant enough for you to either deflect or ignore im sure.The price of rice in China is also not connected to the merits of 907.
I would love to see that. NR LOs have significantly better odds than R - let alone NR who dont own land.
That’s an enforcement issue, not a bill issue. I think that could be solved through the department.Explain how you enforce a 635 nr land owner hunting their own property.