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Non resident Landowner incentive.

If the 15% pool isn't subscribed too, then those licenses go into the general draw.

The 17k are fully subscribed.
Ah so, if your points get entered in 2 draws (one really good, one really bad)? When everyone could just enter in the same draw at higher odds, you are arguing theres no difference in sales/incentive to buy points?

If 15% of the group doesnt have to accumulate as many points, i dont see how this isnt a funding loss to the long term sale of points. Preference points are obvious.
 
Ah so, if your points get entered in 2 draws (one really good, one really bad)? When everyone could just enter in the same draw at higher odds, you are arguing theres no difference in sales/incentive to buy points?

If 15% of the group doesnt have to accumulate as many points, i dont see how this isnt a funding loss to the long term sale of points.

Are we seriously at the point of debating the merits of a bill based on the funding effect it could potentially have on how many people return tags or apply for permits? My head hurts. I don’t even know how to process that.
 
Ah so, if your points get entered in 2 draws (one really good, one really bad)? When everyone could just enter in the same draw at higher odds, you are arguing theres no difference in sales/incentive to buy points?

If 15% of the group doesnt have to accumulate as many points, i dont see how this isnt a funding loss to the long term sale of points. Preference points are obvious.
You’re looking for a problem that doesn’t exist. NR’s are capped for LE permits. No matter who draws their points are being used and therefore someone else is accruing another point. Those 130 people are having a very minimal impact on the draw odds for NR’s wanting a LE permit.

If HB635 gets overturned or amended, great. Every decision has some sort of financial impact, this one is minimal.
 
Are we seriously at the point of debating the merits of a bill based on the funding effect it could potentially have on how many people return tags or apply for permits? My head hurts. I don’t even know how to process that.
Preference points and bonus points are sold for money. Tags that arent gauranteed, have a chance of getting returned. I suppose im sorry tax season is around the corner if its hard to see why some of the revenue is gone.
 
You’re looking for a problem that doesn’t exist. NR’s are capped for LE permits. No matter who draws their points are being used and therefore someone else is accruing another point. Those 130 people are having a very minimal impact on the draw odds for NR’s wanting a LE permit.

If HB635 gets overturned or amended, great. Every decision has some sort of financial impact, this one is minimal.
Minimal for now and not really calculable. Sounds like the beat of the drums that keeps the freebies for college kids, young kids, and people born here.

But okay.
 
Preference points and bonus points are sold for money. Tags that arent gauranteed, have a chance of getting returned. I suppose im sorry tax season is around the corner if its hard to see why some of the revenue is gone.


I’m not being sarcastic or facetious and I understand your point. I just don’t know how anyone could measure what impact 635 has on the budget with any certainty? Full price general tags don’t guarantee a permit and will still be returned at some rate when landowners don’t draw a permit. So the only effect would be on the bonus/preference side.

I think the effect is negligible but how would anyone show what is reality, pro or con? IMO, effects are all speculative on that point.

Some of them the other points you raise in opposition are much more compelling to me.
 
Minimal for now and not really calculable. Sounds like the beat of the drums that keeps the freebies for college kids, young kids, and people born here.

But okay.

Funding effects of the reduced price licenses are
tracked and easily calculated. Cost to other hunters in terms of competition aren’t as easily calculated but are certainly not negligible when we’re talking about 3200 or more additional licenses.

Especially since all those licenses are effectively OTC licenses and not capped. We can expect to see the number of those licenses continue to rise for the foreseeable future.
 
I’m not being sarcastic or facetious and I understand your point. I just don’t know how anyone could measure what impact 635 has on the budget with any certainty? Full price general tags don’t guarantee a permit and will still be returned at some rate when landowners don’t draw a permit. So the only effect would be on the bonus/preference side.

I think the effect is negligible but how would anyone show what is reality, pro or con? IMO, effects are all speculative on that point.

Some of them the other points you raise in opposition are much more compelling to me.
Well if its not something you can really prove its sort of a counter factual, right? I cant say it'll go down x y or z. But i feel like its very valid. Funding is always a golden cow, seemingly until we cant figure out how much the cow weighs.

I hate to be rough on it - but the conversation i had partially changed my trajectory of being involved. I wish you had been there to be a fly on the wall.

I should add - if these forced objective numbers up (say at least +1 per NR LO tag, to break even), id feel ever so slightly better. If it was +5 or +10 id like it a lot more.
 
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Funding effects of the reduced price licenses are
tracked and easily calculated. Cost to other hunters in terms of competition aren’t as easily calculated but are certainly not negligible when we’re talking about 3200 or more additional licenses.

Especially since all those licenses are effectively OTC licenses and not capped. We can expect to see the number of those licenses continue to rise for the foreseeable future.
Ah yes, and we should all be trying to kill that monster before it grows.

It either falls into two categories
1. Too small to care
2. Big enough to affect funding

1 is easier to deal with than 2, and it moves closer to 2 every year.
 
Also - curious - what is the fine for a NR taking game not on their land against the intent off it? Poaching? Or? Not really, cause thats not entirely against the law right? Seems like itd be EXTREMELY hard to enforce. How many NRs have ever been asked if they were on one of these gift tags?

Thats a huge enforcement challenge not bothering anyone else apparently.
 
Perhaps some folks should revisit the NAM, which is why most Montana-based conservation orgs objected to 635 in the first place, and didn't sell out their integrity in exchange for some mythical "good will" from wealthy nonresidents:

1. Wildlife resources are conserved and held in trust for all citizens.
Eh, we can hold some in trust for wealthy citizens that own land elsewhere, that's just fine. No big deal, just the first tenet of the NAM. If the effect is minimal, we are fine giving up on our principles. We get nothing in return, other than the false notion that if you give rich people a bone, they will throw you crumbs.

2.Commerce in dead wildlife is eliminated.

3. Wildlife is allocated according to democratic rule of law.

Of course, the golden rule: he who has the gold, makes the rules. Pay the right people, shake the right tree, and good ideas get killed and bad ones advance.

4. Wildlife may only be killed for a legitimate, non-frivolous purpose.

5. Wildlife is an international resource.

6. Every person has an equal opportunity under the law to participate in hunting and fishing.

*Correction" All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others. If you own land, you are more entitled to opportunity under the law than anyone else.

7. Scientific management is the proper means for wildlife conservation.
 
@Elky Welky ,

Serious question. MT gives landowner preference to resident landowners. Is that a violation of NAM? If so where are the bills to remove that?
Serious answer. Yes, and good question. To elaborate on the yes, just see my response to you earlier in this thread about how I don't find much merit in arguments that we owe landowners anything because they own land. But under the plain language of the NAM, landowner preference is problematic and very much so violates the NAM.

I can really only speculate an answer to the second question, but resident landowner preference has been a thing in MT since before I started getting active in wildlife politics, so I don't know the legislative history. I would be not surprised if at the time it was introduced, people fought against it under the NAM. I predict that the arguments in favor of resident landowner preference followed the same reasoning: like a NR landowner, they own habitat. But unlike a NR, they live here year round, pay different taxes, suffer our winters and droughts, are in our community, suffer the "Montana Tax" of being paid less than most anyone in any other state, etc. As I've pointed out, I personally don't find R or NR landowner preference all that compelling or different regardless, but I would think those were the arguments in favor.

I would then predict the second factor is inertia. Once a bill becomes law it becomes far more difficult to overturn, and could take literally over a hundred years to change: (https://www.ktvq.com/news/montana-politics/montana-bill-aims-to-kill-1895-law-on-fatal-duels): particularly as you have more and more resident landowners that have taken advantage of that program; some even serving in our legislature. I'm sure there was very little appetite from the powers that be to give up something they gave themselves and their constituents. Maybe for a few sessions efforts to overturn it were introduced, I simply don't know. I'd also predict there aren't any legislators that feel they could get elected if they did bring a bill like that now. If they did, I'm sure advocates who believe in the NAM would support it.

Of course the difference here is that 635 is still fresh and very relevant to the current moment, and has the potential to be repealed because there is, in fact, a bill in front of us. @Forky Finder shared that article about land investors buying property under 635, which was one of the exact fears raised when folks stood up against it. And people still remember how it got shoved through over significant objection, and many of the people involved are still around who could make a difference to repeal it.

It should be no surprise to anyone when MT-BHA shows up in support of repealing 635; we fought hard against it when it was introduced under the principle of the NAM and sadly it became law anyways. But @Ben Lamb isn't entirely wrong either; if you are only worried about the fiscal/hunter day/pressure effects of 635, repealing it could be premature; there are too many unknowns. But our support of repeal is based on the very principal it violates, and every day that passes while it is still law is a day we lose the ability to repeal it because of the inertia I talked about above. Eventually, the monied interests that want it in statute will enjoy it too much, and at that point it will be too late. No legislator will bring a bill to repeal it.

And just a side note: this argument that it isn't that important and therefore wasn't worth anyone's time is a knife that cuts both ways. If it violates the NAM, but "isn't that big of a deal," then why was it so important to get it passed last session? If it really wasn't a big deal to its proponents, but it was a big deal to advocates of the NAM, then the people who cared more should have won the day, and 635 shouldn't be the law now. But they didn't. Food for thought.
 
Fair enough. At least there’s consistency in the opposition. I can respect that argument from the perspective of democratic allocation of licenses.

Something of a tangent from the discussion about how we allocate tags, but definitely relevant to the overall issues surrounding wildlife management and the costs of wildlife on private property and benefits to the public that private habitat contributes to wildlife, what if any consideration, appreciation, etc. is reasonable to provide landowners whose property provides habitat?


My old neighbor used to have a sign on his boat that said “Thanks doesn’t fill my gas tank.” It seems a bit relevant to the conflict surrounding wildlife management/ private property/public resources in MT.
 
Something of a tangent from the discussion about how we allocate tags, but definitely relevant to the overall issues surrounding wildlife management and the costs of wildlife on private property and benefits to the public that private habitat contributes to wildlife, what if any consideration, appreciation, etc. is reasonable to provide landowners whose property provides habitat?
That is the question Gerald, you hit it on the head. And one that is always up for debate, and you are going to get wildly different answers from the Stockgrowers, MOGA, PERC, MWF etc. No disagreement that it is a conversation worth having and continuing to have; and has been had a number of times on this platform and elsewhere. You know where I stand.
 
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