For anyone who hunts in ID

martin_shooter

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Oct 11, 2014
Messages
150
Location
ID
See below. Once again the state legislature is trying to go around the commission and the department to pass B.S.


March 4th at the Idaho Sportsmen’s Caucus Advisory Council (ISCAC) meeting we learned about some very bad legislation that could be introduced at the Idaho Legislature. As you may already know, HB32, the Department’s original legislation asking for a 15-20% increase on license fees with an associated “Price Lock” proposal (that would be adopted separately by the Commission) is currently being held in the House Resource and Conservation Committee. Idaho Wildlife Federation supports this legislation.

We now have word from the Department that a new fee bill is being crafted and could be introduced sometime next week. This bill would have the fee increase but codify the price lock in the bill language as well as be an omnibus package of all the bad ideas that special interests have been trying to get implemented for years.

It would:

- Direct the Commission to implement a “Bonus Point” system for controlled hunts
- Direct the Commission to implement a “Governor’s Tag” auction tag for controlled hunt areas
- Institute a new Landowner Appreciation Program tag system in the following manner:
Landowners would receive tags depending on the acreage they own. They could market and sell these tags without IDFG seeing any of the proceeds and the tag could be used on the entire controlled hunt area.
- 640-5,000acres - 1 tag per species
-5,000-10,000acres - 2 tags per species
-Over 10,000acres - 3 tags per species

Additionally landowners with 320 acres and above would receive 1 tag per species for EACH of the following (Up to 3 tags per species)
- Providing some level of public access
- Habitat restoration
- Release of depredation claim

And finally, it will propose a major tweak to the way depredation kills are handled. Currently, landowners must get a tag from IDFG to retain a carcass from a depredation kill. This bill would make it so that once depredation is recognized by the Department, landowners can retain animals from depredation kill with no paperwork.

Upon hearing this, ISCAC members voted to ratify the following official statement:


"On March 4, 2015 a quorum of the Idaho Sportsman's Caucus Advisory Council voted unanimously to support the following statement.

The Idaho Sportsman's Caucus Advisory Council understands the House Resources and Conservation Committee is attempting to amend the IDF&G fee increase proposal to support private interests. ISCAC supports the Idaho Department of Fish and Game in its efforts to increase revenue for Idaho's wildlife in the form of House Bill 0032.

We oppose legislative attempts to circumvent the Idaho Fish and Game Commission's authority to manage Idaho's wildlife using science and public input as opposed to legislative whim. We are opposed to efforts to give private landowners the ability to sell hunting tags for public wildlife. We oppose the legislature mandating a "Governor's Auction Tag" and a "Bonus Point" system for controlled hunts. We oppose unregulated depredation kill by landowners.”

Even though IDFG is in desperate need of a fee increase, we as sportsmen and women cannot let the Legislature hold IDFG’s request hostage and implement bad policy. Things will happen fast over the next week to 10 days and we need to be ready to write emails to legislators and show up at committee hearings. We need to approach this with the same enthusiasm as we showed in our defense of public lands. WE NEED TO BE READY TO DEFEND OUR HUNTING AND OUTDOOR HERITAGE!!!!

In the meantime, write the Governor’s office and tell them you do not support the legislature bypassing the Commission that he has appointed. You can do so here http://gov.idaho.gov/ourgov/contact.html

There may only be 24 hours notice for committee hearings, so pay attention to emails and social media and prepare to act.
 

Mtnboy

WKR
Joined
Feb 26, 2013
Messages
1,296
Location
ID
Thanks for the heads up.

Do you have a link where you got all the info?
 

ngolder

FNG
Joined
Aug 4, 2014
Messages
22
I sent the governor an email even though i do not live in Idaho. I encourage everyone to let the governor of Idaho know how you feel on this issue.
 

Broomd

WKR
Joined
Sep 29, 2014
Messages
4,226
Location
North Idaho
Leave to the state with one of the best recognized systems to f.i.u.....I'll be contacting the necessary legislators....thanks for this posting.
 
Joined
Jan 17, 2013
Messages
411
Location
Idaho
I'm getting tired of fighting this issue every year. Landowner tag changes were discussed last year and IDFG listend to sportsmen and didn't implement the proposal. Bonus points have been proposed and rejected 3 times in the last 10 years. This attempt by the legislature has me absolutely livid.

This is the committee that has the bill:

Resources and Conservation
Water quality/rights, fish and game, river restoration
Odd Days, pm, Room EW40
Secretary: Jennifer Smith
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 332-1136

The members of the committee are:
Chair Dell Raybould
Vice Chair Terry Gestrin
Mike Moyle
Ken Andrus
Paul E. Shepherd
Fred Wood
Judy Boyle
John Vander Woude
Marc Gibbs
Steven Miller
Linden B. Bateman
Van Burtenshaw
Ron Mendive
Julie VanOrden
Rick D. Youngblood
Donna Pence
Mat Erpelding
Ilana Rubel

You can easily find their contact info on the Idaho State Legislature website.

Also the following have also been indicated to be heavily involved in this:
House side

Scott Bedke; 208-332-1111 [email protected]
Dell Raybould; 208-332-1173 [email protected]
Terry Gestrin; 208-332-1124 [email protected]
Mike Moyle; 3208-332-1120 [email protected]
Marc Gibbs; 208-332-1042 [email protected]

Senate Side

Steve Bair; 208-332-1385 [email protected]
Bert Brackett; 208-332-1336 [email protected]
Jeff Siddoway; 208-332-1342 [email protected]

The Governor’s office should be included on all of this as well.
http://gov.idaho.gov/ourgov/contact.html

The following comment is from the Idaho Deer Alliance:

"Reps, Bracket, Bedkey, Sidaway, Bear, and of course Moyle are behind this. One of them told a commissioner "I don't care what the sportsmen think, I want this"
 

T43

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Apr 13, 2012
Messages
259
Article in the Statesman about it today. This isn't going away until the bums pushing it are voted out. It sounds like they may make a last minute end run through a different committee to push their agenda. There is also legislation to tax exempt some of the costs of raising private wildlife for high fenced hunting operations. Combine that with the importation of worm infested private wildlife and this could easily be looked at as the year the legislature did what the wolves couldn't when it comes to hunting in Idaho.

Interesting comment in the article from Idaho SFW that they want to hold the funding bill as well. They are one of the big pushers behind the privatizing of our tags at the legislative level.
 

gmajor

WKR
Joined
Mar 25, 2014
Messages
609
Is there anyway we can set up one of those online templates + open-ended response section that makes it easy to get more people to contact the governor?
 

Mike7

WKR
Joined
Feb 28, 2012
Messages
1,305
Location
Northern Idaho
I just got the email from Fish & Game (somehow I don't see WA Fish & Wildlife ever being this ballsy) and I also just emailed the govenor.




A Message from Your Commission

This message from the Fish & Game Commissioners has been posted to the department's website

Idaho Fish and Game Commissioners

Fred Trevey, Chairman

Mark Doerr, Vice-Chair

Brad Corkill

Blake Fischer

Lane Clezie

Kenny Anderson

Will Naillon



Fish and Game Commission Process Should Be Protected

By Commissioners Fred Trevey (chairman), Mark Doerr (vice-chair), Brad Corkill, Blake Fischer, Lane Clezie, Kenny Anderson and Will Naillon

There appears to be a misperception among some Idaho lawmakers that the Fish and Game Commission has ignored prior legislative directives to raise revenue and improve habitat and access. These directives include allowing hunters to pay an extra fee to improve their drawing odds for controlled hunts (bonus points), making tags available to land owners for private sale, and auctioning big game tags to highest bidders.

We certainly respect the Legislature’s role in setting wildlife policy but the Commission has considered all these issues in recent years and vetted each of them with hunters, anglers, trappers and the general public. In all three cases, a majority made it clear to us they were opposed and we acted accordingly. The Commission continues to explore these and other options and to visit with sportsmen and women about them. However, we have heard and are concerned these directives could become legislative mandates linked to our proposed license revenue bill.

The Commission-supported “Price Lock” revenue legislation – House Bill 32, is being held in a House Committee while some lawmakers are said to be working on their own version with these mandates included. If this new version of the bill emerges, it in our view, overrules the Commission process of using science and input from the public as the basis for implementing wildlife policy.

The 1938 citizens’ initiative that created the Commission established nonpartisan fish and game management. If lawmakers proceed and attempt to bypass the Commission and implement these measures through legislation, they are compromising the spirit of that initiative by overruling extensive sportsmen involvement and thoughtful Commission deliberations.

As Commissioners, here are some common themes we often hear:

• Manage wildlife for the good of all Idahoans, not just a privileged few.

• Keep hunting, fishing & trapping opportunities available and affordable for everyday Idahoans.

• Reward landowners for supporting wildlife habitat or public access without sacrificing state ownership of wildlife.

• Keep politics out of wildlife management.

For 76 years, the Commission, along with sportsmen and women have worked together to create the tremendous wildlife resources and heritage we have in Idaho today. We ask the Legislature to pass the Commission-supported revenue bill without compromising the Commission’s integrity and its management role.
 
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