BuzzH
Well-known member
Costs to hunt as a NR have not increased that much when you compare license fees with mean annual income.
In 1979, the year I started hunting in Montana, a NR big-game combo was $226...mean income $16,533 so about 1.4% of the average income to buy a NR license.
In 2023 the price of the same combo license is $1108...mean income of $54,132 so right at 2% of the average income to buy a NR license.
Compare those same percentages of average income with rent, new vehicles, clothes, food, house costs, etc.
Your problem isn't the price of the NR license in 2023, the problem is wages have NOT kept up with the costs of other basic living expenses.
If you want to secure future involvement and keep hunting affordable, then demand that wages keep up with inflation, COL, etc.
That's what solves the problem, not demanding that tag fees stay at 1979 levels.
In 1979, the year I started hunting in Montana, a NR big-game combo was $226...mean income $16,533 so about 1.4% of the average income to buy a NR license.
In 2023 the price of the same combo license is $1108...mean income of $54,132 so right at 2% of the average income to buy a NR license.
Compare those same percentages of average income with rent, new vehicles, clothes, food, house costs, etc.
Your problem isn't the price of the NR license in 2023, the problem is wages have NOT kept up with the costs of other basic living expenses.
If you want to secure future involvement and keep hunting affordable, then demand that wages keep up with inflation, COL, etc.
That's what solves the problem, not demanding that tag fees stay at 1979 levels.