cuerro viejo
WKR
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2013
- Messages
- 2,890
Once all states go to electronic HL data will become actually accurate.
NM, TX, Okla, etc are starting to get better data.
NM, TX, Okla, etc are starting to get better data.
Scenario 1: You kill a bull & tell a little old lady over the phone you didn't kill one & she checks a box.I'm surprised at how the predominate opinion here seems to be something like...
1. People lie on their reports, so they cannot be trusted
2. We should mandate reporting
Maybe I'm not understanding the argument.
Maybe I don’t understand how mandatory reporting would work. Where does this wildlife officer go to confirm that you killed (or didn’t kill) an elk? Your house? Does he get to search your premises on the grounds that you *might* have lied?Scenario 1: You kill a bull & tell a little old lady over the phone you didn't kill one & she checks a box.
Scenario 2: You kill a bull & on the mandatory reporting system you say you didn't kill one. The wildlife officer rolls in a week later & confirms that you actually did kill one. He then issues you a fine & confiscates your meat & head because you lied. He also says you can't get another tag for 5 years.
Which scenario do you think would inspire a hunter to report their result more truthfully?
I don't have all the answers to all hypotheticals but just throwing this example out there... you legally kill a bull, legally punch the tag but report that you did not kill anything. CPW does a check of the local taxidermy shop (normal for them to do this, at least here in NC) & cross references the harvest report. He sees you lied on the harvest report & you get fined, etc.Maybe I don’t understand how mandatory reporting would work. Where does this wildlife officer go to confirm that you killed (or didn’t kill) an elk? Your house? Does he get to search your premises on the grounds that you *might* have lied?
I’m skeptical. I mean, the majority of hunters report that they did not get an elk right? Something like 80%? Is CPW going to spend all the money to do the detective work on *every one* of those to make sure they did not in fact get an elk? That seems like a massive undertaking. What about the tens of thousands of nonresidents, for that matter?I don't have all the answers to all hypotheticals but just throwing this example out there... you legally kill a bull, legally punch the tag but report that you did not kill anything. CPW does a check of the local taxidermy shop (normal for them to do this, at least here in NC) & cross references the harvest report. He sees you lied on the harvest report & you get fined, etc.
As I stated earlier... I don't think this SHOULD be put into place but it COULD easily be done if they wanted to get accurate harvest reports.
I don't think anyone is suggesting actually checking that many people like in the example above. The discussion was originally about having an app or a phone # that everyone could self report easily in about 30 seconds.I’m skeptical. I mean, the majority of hunters report that they did not get an elk right? Something like 80%? Is CPW going to spend all the money to do the detective work on *every one* of those to make sure they did not in fact get an elk? That seems like a massive undertaking. What about the tens of thousands of nonresidents, for that matter?
Not to mention potential constitutional issues. “Responding to a survey” doesn’t constitute probable cause for some wildlife officer to come search your place for meat.
I could see them making some efforts to check honesty in some cases, of the kind you mentioned. But not a full blown 100% mandatory check-in for every hunter.
You might be surprisedI’m skeptical. I mean, the majority of hunters report that they did not get an elk right? Something like 80%? Is CPW going to spend all the money to do the detective work on *every one* of those to make sure they did not in fact get an elk? That seems like a massive undertaking. What about the tens of thousands of nonresidents, for that matter?
Not to mention potential constitutional issues. “Responding to a survey” doesn’t constitute probable cause for some wildlife officer to come search your place for meat.
I could see them making some efforts to check honesty in some cases, of the kind you mentioned. But not a full blown 100% mandatory check-in for every hunter.
The threat of legal action is enough to make sure 99% of people self report. If they go to mandatory reporting and a false report leads to loss of privileges the following year I believe the reporting would be very accurate.Scenario 1: You kill a bull & tell a little old lady over the phone you didn't kill one & she checks a box.
Scenario 2: You kill a bull & on the mandatory reporting system you say you didn't kill one. The wildlife officer rolls in a week later & confirms that you actually did kill one. He then issues you a fine & confiscates your meat & head because you lied. He also says you can't get another tag for 5 years.
Which scenario do you think would inspire a hunter to report their result more truthfully?
You’re clueless. Try golf. Well maybe not because you have to fill out a card showing your score. Better skip bowling too. How about cornhole? No paperwork.Maybe I don’t understand how mandatory reporting would work. Where does this wildlife officer go to confirm that you killed (or didn’t kill) an elk? Your house? Does he get to search your premises on the grounds that you *might* have lied?
About?You might be surprised
Sure. My thought is just that I don't see how creating an app would solve the supposed problem, which seems to be widely held, that rampant lying causes harvest reports to be useless. The supposed liars would just... not use the app, or lie, right? What would make it more accurate than the current survey process?I don't think anyone is suggesting actually checking that many people like in the example above. The discussion was originally about having an app or a phone # that everyone could self report easily in about 30 seconds.
I'm done with this conversation
In some states, you can't buy a license the next year, until you update your hunter report (whether you tagged out or not)Sure. My thought is just that I don't see how creating an app would solve the supposed problem, which seems to be widely held, that rampant lying causes harvest reports to be useless. The supposed liars would just... not use the app, or lie, right? What would make it more accurate than the current survey process?
Don't get me wrong - I'm all for an app that makes reporting easier. I just don't think it solves the problem that people seem to believe is happening in this thread.