BuzzH
Well-known member
Political capital is what we would be burning. Along with a concerted campaign that costs money, lobbyist, social media, etc. to make a run at an honest effort to reverse the wilderness guide law. Where is the nr funding to do such a campaign? NR's bitch everytime their license fees increase once every 5-10 years...I don't see them shelling out to fund a campaign to undo the wilderness guide law...I just don't.Completely understand the significant difference between changing an existing law and stopping proposed legislation. Maybe changing the wilderness rule is a bridge too far….
I am a bit confused by your second question. How would resident hunters be giving up anything by opposing outfitter set asides and transferable landowner tags? NR hunters are giving up something with a transition to 90/10 (not that we had to be willing, clearly a resident decision) What are you asking resident hunters to give up by increasing their tag allocation to 90/10?
I was operating under the assumption that
the focus of this forum is advocating for DIY western hunting and most folks oppose state regulations that force hunters to use guides/outfitters, resident or non-resident. And within that advocacy we are willing to oppose those proposals going forward on principle alone.
I also don't see a lot of the state ngo's being willing to buck the outfitter lobby to change it. Unfortunately there is a symbiotic relationship with a lot of ngo's and outfitters.
What you would have to give up to gain access imo, is outfitter set asides from the nr pool of tags.
Is it worth it to gain access to wilderness that you can already get for free via a resident friend?
That's the question.