Nemont
Well-known member
Outfitters and hunting clubs bidding for leases sounds a lot like free market basics. If $300 is the difference between affording to hunt out of state or not I don’t think you should be in the game.Nemont, I agree with everything you wrote. If I was king this is exactly how things would operate.
My problem is that every time the outfitter unequal opportunity tag issue comes up the solution is to raise the nonresident license price. Effectively pricing many of the average joe's competing with the outfitter clients and hunt club members out of the market. This makes getting a tag more dependent on ones bank account than in the past. In other words, only equal opportunity if you have a thick wallet.
This is what happened with I-161 and for nearly 10 years the quantity of tags demanded in the draw at the price offered was fewer than the number of tags offered. Club members were able to get all the tags they wanted at a price of less than they were willing to pay. They no longer had to find an outfitter to provide a guaranteed license. A twisting of the intent of the outfitter sponsored licenses in my opinion. Hunt clubs were the big winners of I-161. Outfitters and their clients won in that they still had a guaranteed tag but also lost in that many of them now had to compete with hunt clubs for the best properties. The big loser was the average joe of modest means who was priced out of the market and stayed home or hunted Montana less frequently.
Now it seams that we are going down the same path with 143 that we did with I-161. I expect the hunt club members to come out the winners again and the loser will be the DYI nonresident that is unwilling to pay the extra 300 dollars.
not to be a smart ass but why should the average Joe Montanan care what it costs if there are people willing to pony up the cash to play tag lottery?
I can’t understand why so many people want to pay what they do now for the quality of critters we manage for but it’s their money not mine.
nemont