Free: Contests & Raffles.
Josh,Hmmm...I'm not so sure. To a certain extent, doesn't the overall concept already exist? Take special permit tags for example, if you don't have a big bull tag you can't hunt the public area for one. Didn't draw a doe tag or cow tag for the kiddo? Same thing...can't hunt that public ground for that animal.
Just a matter of time.........The Associated PressPORT ANGELES, WASH. Washington's Fort Flagler State Park is one of two in the system that could be part of a pilot program to bring in more private business development.The Peninsula Daily News reports (http://bit.ly/27SBljJ ) that the Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission is considering seeking proposals for private development of some park amenities, like cabins or food service, at Fort Flagler or Millersylvania.Fort Flagler is on Marrowstone Island and Millersylvania is about 10 miles south of Olympia.State parks spokeswoman Virginia Painter says the system already has concession agreements without outside vendors, but the pilot program would let the parks reach out to companies for development at a specific spot.The soonest the commission could take action on the pilot proposal is September.Read more here: http://www.theolympian.com/latest-news/article79814937.html#storylink=cpy
Quote from: 2MANY on May 25, 2016, 11:49:58 AMJust a matter of time.........The Associated PressPORT ANGELES, WASH. Washington's Fort Flagler State Park is one of two in the system that could be part of a pilot program to bring in more private business development.The Peninsula Daily News reports (http://bit.ly/27SBljJ ) that the Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission is considering seeking proposals for private development of some park amenities, like cabins or food service, at Fort Flagler or Millersylvania.Fort Flagler is on Marrowstone Island and Millersylvania is about 10 miles south of Olympia.State parks spokeswoman Virginia Painter says the system already has concession agreements without outside vendors, but the pilot program would let the parks reach out to companies for development at a specific spot.The soonest the commission could take action on the pilot proposal is September.Read more here: http://www.theolympian.com/latest-news/article79814937.html#storylink=cpyThe problem is that State Parks are under funded. They do not have enough funding to be maintained. If we want to keep our parks we must find a way to fund them, allowing private vendors and services is a way to bring in badly needed funds.This issue is much different than the wilderness issue.
No worries Josh...let me try a different tact.Let's take Area #1 and Area #2. Both of the land holdings are in the same GMU. Area #1 is federal land under Forest Service management. There is almost zero accountability to hunters and the public at large. Roads are gated or tank trapped. Campgrounds are closed or run down. There is comparatively little wildlife due to a lack of effective hands-on management in terms of food/water/shelter availability for the critters that call it home. Since it's public land, you are free to roam it whenever you like and hunt it if you have the requisite license and tags to do so.Area #2 is private land owned and operated by Farmer Bill. It holds an abundant amount of game birds, deer and elk given the habitat, water and feed the landowner has put in place and carefully managed over the years as ancillary bi-products of the cash crops he raises to make his living. Unless someone knows Farmer Bill, people are expressly prohibited from trespassing on his property, much less hunt it even if they have the requisite license and tags for the GMU.Let's say that there are 2 big bulls on the public land, and 10 big bulls on the private property. WDFW issues a quota of 5 big bull tags for the GMU. If you luck out and draw one of the five big bull tags, you are effectively competing with 4 other hunters for the 2 public land bulls.What I'm curious about is what would happen if the Forest Service was effectively replaced as "the managers and stewards" of those public lands by the highest bidding private organization willing to take on the roles of providing improved road and trail access for everyone (it's still public property!) and improve the food/water/shelter aspects such that there would eventually be a significantly higher and sustainable number of big bulls...thereby equating to more big bull tags and more hunting opportunities for John Q. Public.So, in the example above, instead of OUR tax dollars being inefficiently allotted to the Forest Service's annual procurement of brand new fleets of vehicles, it's paid to a private entity that over time works efficiently to manage the land and increase the number of big bulls on public land to 10 (for a total of 20 big bulls in the GMU). The WDFW looks at the population figures and determines that increasing the tag quota in the GMU to 10 big bulls is sustainable. Now there are 8 more hunting tags available to draw and John Q. Public gets to hunt them.Mind you, I'm not pounding the table as this being the be-all end-all approach we should do. It's just an idea I'm throwing out there for discussion. Maybe there's merit. Maybe there's not. I'm generally not a fan of reinventing the wheel so I'd look to see if there are other similar programs being attempted elsewhere so we could review if it is or isn't working, and why.Does that help explain where I'm coming from?Regards,Allen
Why would "Farmer Bill" make all of these improvements at no cost, while paying for a lease?
Welcome Dan-I agree with that. NRA is a gun organization, not a hunting group. I do not associate the 2nd amendment to hunting rights and do not like the divisive positions many take within the NRA... I do not feel like Ted Nugent represents me as a hunter at all....
Quote from: bearpaw on May 25, 2016, 02:25:25 PMQuote from: 2MANY on May 25, 2016, 11:49:58 AMJust a matter of time.........The Associated PressPORT ANGELES, WASH. Washington's Fort Flagler State Park is one of two in the system that could be part of a pilot program to bring in more private business development.The Peninsula Daily News reports (http://bit.ly/27SBljJ ) that the Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission is considering seeking proposals for private development of some park amenities, like cabins or food service, at Fort Flagler or Millersylvania.Fort Flagler is on Marrowstone Island and Millersylvania is about 10 miles south of Olympia.State parks spokeswoman Virginia Painter says the system already has concession agreements without outside vendors, but the pilot program would let the parks reach out to companies for development at a specific spot.The soonest the commission could take action on the pilot proposal is September.Read more here: http://www.theolympian.com/latest-news/article79814937.html#storylink=cpyThe problem is that State Parks are under funded. They do not have enough funding to be maintained. If we want to keep our parks we must find a way to fund them, allowing private vendors and services is a way to bring in badly needed funds.This issue is much different than the wilderness issue.How is it different? Transfer of public lands to private ownership. Who's to say that the next big chunk of the Marckworth state forest doesn't get sold to Weyerhauser because the state doesn't want to pay to maintain it? Then that big and public chunk of land is now pay to play just like the state park 2MANY mentioned.P.S. there is a lot more to the public land transfer debate than just wilderness.