I fully believe that it is fixable and think they are slowly heading that way. Just look at the CWMU for what could be to certain extent. Actually, and it pains me to say so, DP is helping quite a bit with the biggest long term issue and that is habitat quality. SPfW & SPH spend quite a bit of money annually on habitat projects. As rocs mentions, PJ encroachment is probably the biggest habitat issue in the state, IMO. A PJ expert contends that UT needs to treat 50k acres annually to just break even on the accumulation of biomass. It would take a big shift to really make this even possible, but given the commitment/money it could be done. Chaining would be the fastest/cheapest way to get started, however the amount backlash the agencies receive when this is proposed is immense. So, the alternatives being used are more expensive and slower to produce pretty much the same thing. But it's better than doing nothing and I think it's the right place to start.Pointer - You lived and worked on these issues for many years while planted in Utah. Do you think they have a problem that is fixable?
Not that you are DP, but if you were, what would be the long-term solutions you would put in place? Just curious, as my observations are always tainted by my bias toward preserving opportunity and keeping hunters in the field, with greater restrictions on access. Maybe that won't work in Utah.
Do you see them going the same route with deer as they did with elk? Extreme quality with very little opportunity.
I personally don't see UT going the way of elk with deer. That is something I think would get the resident sportsmen up in arms. I think it was a similar type issue that started DPs "reign". Similarly, the amount of friction created by vehicle restrictions is very high, especially for the Feds. Though it is getting better, but I really don't see that changing all that much until it is pushed harder by the state, which they seem very reluctant to do.