Strictly speaking, mandatory harvest reports aren't the huge issue people make them out to be.
People can and do still skip 'mandatory' reports. I live in a state that's had them forever. Before the internet, the 'check station' was a deeply ingrained part of our culture - every county had a few gas stations that would 'check in' your deer - and having known and lived around a ton of hunters, as a kid I could tell you who was going to 'check in' their deer and who would just take it home and butcher it and go on with life. Fast forward to the internet days and it's still an issue.
Of course, the harvest models the state builds every year accounts for this to some degree. And the harvest models that other states use, whether they have mandatory checks or not, also account for compliance with reporting or voluntary surveys or whatever. I've seen the innards of how state agencies run (college degree in WM here, which is part of the basis for why I enjoy discussing these things) well enough to grasp that a model can be built without mandatory harvest data (Mississippi is a great example; they used to have no harvest reporting, now it's voluntary).
Do I think mandatory reporting is a good thing from a modeling standpoint? Yes. Is it 100% necessary? No. Of course, such reporting is much easier now, to both implement and enforce (not perfectly, just easier than it used to be) and the bar is fairly low with a phone in every hunter's pocket.
But don't think the state is going to go from complete ignorance of harvest levels, to perfect knowledge, in one year, or even five or ten years. A culture that has never been forced to report harvests, won't adopt it overnight. Reality is, the state probably isn't as clueless as you think about harvests now, and probably wouldn't have a perfect grasp of it if they implemented mandatory reporting.
I'm just saying, temper your expectations. Don't be surprised when a lot of hunters resist it and don't be surprised if some of them resist it precisely because they fear it'll be used to reduce their own opportunities. I mean, some of you guys will be shocked when you learn that people do things to manipulate systems for their own self interests. Shocked, I say.
(wink).