Free: Contests & Raffles.
So it is basically like the initiatives in 1996 that asked the general public about trapping, hunting with hounds and baiting bears. Wildlife management should not be left up to the clueless voters of this state. .......wdfw should realize this and maybe do.
Caller 1: “Hi Dave. We need to get some data on hunters’ perceptions of baiting for deer and elk in Washington. Can you help?”Caller 2: “Let me see what I can do. I’ve got a focus group that’s helped us out before with these types of issues. I used them when we implemented the change to special permits back in 2010. It allowed us to say we had ‘broad public support’ for it. What a hoot.”Caller 1: “Thanks Dave. That would be great. How quickly can you get the results? We have a commission meeting coming up.”Caller 2: “I’ll get on it. I almost forgot to ask: what do you want the results to be?”
You might try: Nate Pamplin Nathan.Pamplin@dfw.wa.gov 360-902-2693
Quote from: Curly on February 11, 2015, 10:21:46 AMYou might try: Nate Pamplin Nathan.Pamp lin@dfw.wa.gov 360-902-2693 Just left him a message
You might try: Nate Pamplin Nathan.Pamp lin@dfw.wa.gov 360-902-2693
Demographics in this survey don't make sense. I suspect fraud.King County has about 30% the population of the state. That doesn't mean that it has 30% of the hunters, but it should have at least 10%. The survey demographics don't show anything like that. Then there are 7 surveys taken by people that live in California, 5 from Oregon... but just 6 taken by deer hunters that live in any of the NE counties (Okanogan, Douglas, Grant, Lincoln, Ferry, Stevens, and Pend Oreille)... and 4 from the SE counties (Adams, Franklin, Whitman, Asotin, Garfield, Columbia, and Walla Walla).I suspect the fraud may have been accomplished this way: A master list of phone numbers was prepared for the survey taking company, the survey company made random selections from the prepared list. However the prepared list was not a representative sample. This way the survey taking company can legitimately claim that they called random phone numbers.If the survey was conducted in a scientific manner with a representative sampling, we should expect a similar result. I doubt a properly conducted survey would produce a result like this.