BuzzH
Well-known member
Had a zoom meeting earlier this week with the Game and Fish for the conservation roundtable and a couple things some may find interesting:
Unofficially, total hunting applications were up 18,000 over last year.
The only place NR applications declined some was elk, primarily cow/calf applications.
NR pronghorn applicants were up 8900, Resident applicants up 5600.
Resident fishing license sales were up 12,000 total which results in a $200,000 bump in fishing license sales.
On the GF revenue side, because Wyoming GF is only funded via license fees, PR/DJ, etc. there will be no loss of revenue or cuts to the GF budget. The GF is voluntarily choosing to make some cuts in a few places, seasonal/contract workers, equipment purchases, and grizzly bear management...all around 5-10% reductions.
Overall pretty good news from the Department considering the circumstances and what's going on.
Unofficially, total hunting applications were up 18,000 over last year.
The only place NR applications declined some was elk, primarily cow/calf applications.
NR pronghorn applicants were up 8900, Resident applicants up 5600.
Resident fishing license sales were up 12,000 total which results in a $200,000 bump in fishing license sales.
On the GF revenue side, because Wyoming GF is only funded via license fees, PR/DJ, etc. there will be no loss of revenue or cuts to the GF budget. The GF is voluntarily choosing to make some cuts in a few places, seasonal/contract workers, equipment purchases, and grizzly bear management...all around 5-10% reductions.
Overall pretty good news from the Department considering the circumstances and what's going on.