CorbLand
WKR
- Joined
- Mar 16, 2016
- Messages
- 9,725
I didn’t see issuing tags on their budget and that generally means that it’s such a small amount it doesn’t warrant spelling it out.Agree, they're not immune to inflation. Governments do seem immune to efficiency though.
Given advances in technology, shouldn't administering tags and licenses, surveying animals, etc., become cheaper at some point?
Looking at their budget, it's not a huge percentage that actually even goes to wildlife, hunting , enforcement, etc. Of the 100M budget, Less than half has anything to do with wildlife and hunting, etc.
I guess someone has to subsidize the 6M fish hatcheries....
Yes, all of those things you have listed should get cheaper with technology and from what I understand many have. What hasn’t gotten cheaper is the cost of labor and other input costs to do it.
Animal surveys are largely done by aircraft…has it gotten cheaper to fly in the last 20 years? Same can be said for the paper for tags and mailing them to you. Or the tires on the pickup to go do a project.
Don’t forget that some of that payroll expense goes back to benefiting wildlife. Its where all your biologist and game wardens wages/benefits are going to be. Without them, it wouldn’t matter how much money you had, you wouldn’t be able to do much with it.
Payroll is generally the largest expense a business has. Like I said in an earlier post, a 2.5% increase to that would add more than 1.25 million. 2.5% is still below the inflation rate for 2026 and we are a little over a quarter of the way through.
I will and have been the first person to talk about government inefficiency. I deal with it everyday I am at work. But if your metric for having to raise prices is based on “well they should just be more efficient” then that means every business that has had to raise prices is due to inefficiency. If that is the case, Wyoming Game and Fish has got to be about as efficient as they come because they raised their prices on a subset of customers 50 bucks over the span of what 18 years?
I don’t know about you but my groceries, fuel, utilities, pretty much everything are up well over 50 bucks a month each and that’s just in the last 6 years.
I don’t know guys, I have said that it sucks but a little rational thought answers a lot of the questions.
I am out of this discussion though. If I want to hunt Wyoming some day, guess it’s going to cost me 50 bucks more a year. As someone that has primarily hunted out of state since 2023…50 bucks a year is absolutely nothing compared to the other costs associated with it.


