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FWP proposes limitation on archery elk hunting
Issue will be hashed out in public meetings next month; decision due in February
By MARK HENCKEL
Gazette Outdoor Editor
HELENA - The Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks Commission voted unanimously Thursday to put a proposal to limit archery elk hunting in 31 central and Eastern Montana hunting districts on the tentative 2008-09 hunting regulations.
The decision came down to allowing Montana hunters to have their say on the idea at 44 public meetings to be held across the state in January. The commission will make a final decision at its February meeting.
The elk archery proposal drew a crowd of about 150 to the commission meeting at the Red Lion Colonial Inn. Many came to talk, and comments ran for more than two hours before the commission voted.
Most of the testimony came from outfitters who opposed the plan to limit either-sex archery elk hunting. Permit numbers would be limited to 65 percent of the average number of archers in the Missouri Breaks districts and 85 percent of the archery average in 23 other hunting districts in central and eastern portions of the state. Archery elk districts affected are those that currently allow bull hunting only to rifle hunters who draw permits.
The limits on either-sex licenses targeted crowding in the Missouri Breaks districts and increasing access problems across Eastern Montana. With reins put on the either-sex permits, nonresident hunters could be limited to 10 percent of the licenses in a district.
Sportsmen, in general, backed the either-sex elk archery cutbacks and wanted the opportunity for resident hunters to hear more about it at the public meetings.
As Darrell Olson of Shepherd put it, "Most of the people talking against this proposal have a vested financial interest in this."
"Give the public not here today a chance to comment on this proposal," said Billy Lewis, who lives in Livingston.
A long line of individual outfitters plus representatives of agricultural groups and the Montana Outfitters and Guides Association opposed the elk archery limitations, and many said they would rather see the commission pass the issue on to FWP's Public Land/Private Wildlife Advisory Council for consideration.
That council is made up of outfitters, landowners and sportsmen.
"This tentative has more to do with social issues than biology, and social issues don't have a place before the commission. I hope you don't put this tentative out for 44 meetings where three groups can fight one another," said Jean Johnson, a lobbyist for the Montana Outfitters and Guides Association.
The commission also voted to allow an unlimited number of antlerless elk archery permits for the 31 districts. Archers could apply for them as a second or third choice on the permit application so those who didn't draw a bull permit would still be able to hunt.
With the commission setting tentatives and seasons for both 2008 and 2009, outfitters then asked to defer any changes to the 2009 season because clients had been booked for the 2008 season.
On a split vote, the commission decided to go ahead with 2008 and for the department to prepare options for full refunds of clients who bought outfitter-guaranteed licenses but didn't draw the either-sex tags that would allow them to take a bull.
"I think it's important that the public be involved in this process through the 44 public meetings," said FWP Commissioner Dan Vermillion, of Livingston.
"There's value in getting to a point where people who disagree have to talk to each other, and this will provide that opportunity," said FWP Commission Chairman Steve Doherty, of Missoula.