Setting aside the Wyo Commissioner tags and only looking at the Governor Tags (5 each of goat, bison, sheep, elk, deer) - the Wyo statutes give these to the governor.
The tradition is to work exclusively through a single-purpose nonprofit, the Wyoming Wildlife Foundation.
This nonprofit has two employees and works with "partner" non profits to auction off the tags (Wild Sheep Foundation, for example, for the Sheep Tags - which in 2018 averaged $100,000/each).
The Wyoming Wildlife Foundation and the "partner" nonprofit each take a 10% cut from the tag sale price, and the remaining money is pooled and then distributed by a committee of mucky mucks called the Wyoming Governor's Big Game License Coalition, who takes wildlife-focused applications and then distributes the funds.
The WY G&F Department completes with the University of Wyoming, nonprofits, and other researchers for this money.
The money is significant - From 2012 to 2018, the sale auction of Wyoming Governor Tag generated $4.7 million. Of this total, 80%, or approximately $3.8 million went to the Wyoming Governor’s Big Game License Coalition (WGBGLC) to fund various Wyoming-based wildlife conservation projects. This means, nearly $1 of wildlife money million went to nonprofits just in sales commissions.
In the last couple years yet another nonprofit, the Wyldife Fund, was created ... and this private nonprofit has become somewhat of an arm of the G&F department. I can't get Resident Hunter Preference for Leftover Tags on the G&F Commission Agenda, but seemingly every meeting they get an Wyldlife Fund update from the organiztations exec. director. This nonprofit is also now several receiving full or partial Commissioner tag donations.
Most recently I saw the Wyldlife Fund was selling advertising in the Wyoming Hunt Planner. I asked the exec. director for the financial arrangement the fund had with the G&F Department ... it is getting a cut of each ad sold. He would divulge, so I filed a public information request with the G&F Department.
Each G&F Commissioner gets 8 Commissioner tags, which at the upper end of $20K for an elk tag = $1,120,000 of tag-generated income going to private nonprofits years.
The Governor's tags generate approx $1 mill/year, and with the 20% cut for the nonprofits, we're looking at another $200,000 going to nonprofits.
So, around $1.32 million give or take a couple hundred thousand in wildlife money going to unaccountable nonprofits, each year, in Wyoming.
The FTE for a G&F Warden or Biologist is approx $70,000. $1.32 mill / $70K = 18.
The G&F could set up an in-house staff of 3 to manage all these tag actions, keep the money in-house, and field 15 additional wardens and/or biologists state wide - at the current market rates for these tags ...which will only keep going up.
The tradition is to work exclusively through a single-purpose nonprofit, the Wyoming Wildlife Foundation.
This nonprofit has two employees and works with "partner" non profits to auction off the tags (Wild Sheep Foundation, for example, for the Sheep Tags - which in 2018 averaged $100,000/each).
The Wyoming Wildlife Foundation and the "partner" nonprofit each take a 10% cut from the tag sale price, and the remaining money is pooled and then distributed by a committee of mucky mucks called the Wyoming Governor's Big Game License Coalition, who takes wildlife-focused applications and then distributes the funds.
The WY G&F Department completes with the University of Wyoming, nonprofits, and other researchers for this money.
The money is significant - From 2012 to 2018, the sale auction of Wyoming Governor Tag generated $4.7 million. Of this total, 80%, or approximately $3.8 million went to the Wyoming Governor’s Big Game License Coalition (WGBGLC) to fund various Wyoming-based wildlife conservation projects. This means, nearly $1 of wildlife money million went to nonprofits just in sales commissions.
In the last couple years yet another nonprofit, the Wyldife Fund, was created ... and this private nonprofit has become somewhat of an arm of the G&F department. I can't get Resident Hunter Preference for Leftover Tags on the G&F Commission Agenda, but seemingly every meeting they get an Wyldlife Fund update from the organiztations exec. director. This nonprofit is also now several receiving full or partial Commissioner tag donations.
Most recently I saw the Wyldlife Fund was selling advertising in the Wyoming Hunt Planner. I asked the exec. director for the financial arrangement the fund had with the G&F Department ... it is getting a cut of each ad sold. He would divulge, so I filed a public information request with the G&F Department.
Each G&F Commissioner gets 8 Commissioner tags, which at the upper end of $20K for an elk tag = $1,120,000 of tag-generated income going to private nonprofits years.
The Governor's tags generate approx $1 mill/year, and with the 20% cut for the nonprofits, we're looking at another $200,000 going to nonprofits.
So, around $1.32 million give or take a couple hundred thousand in wildlife money going to unaccountable nonprofits, each year, in Wyoming.
The FTE for a G&F Warden or Biologist is approx $70,000. $1.32 mill / $70K = 18.
The G&F could set up an in-house staff of 3 to manage all these tag actions, keep the money in-house, and field 15 additional wardens and/or biologists state wide - at the current market rates for these tags ...which will only keep going up.