Free: Contests & Raffles.
Right now it feels like I need a lawyer to help me navigate a complicated system so that I can harvest an animal or catch a fish that they don't really want me to take.
Quote from: jagermiester on August 15, 2018, 12:48:30 PMRight now it feels like I need a lawyer to help me navigate a complicated system so that I can harvest an animal or catch a fish that they don't really want me to take.People say this same thing in every state "the regs are too confusing." I've asked game wardens across the country this and they've all heard this.There are some states that don't even publish the actual season dates but rather state something along the lines of "Last Saturday in October extending for 25 days" and it is up to the hunter/angler to figure out the exact season.I was recently in Texas where you can buy an "extra red drum tag" which allows you to take a red drum over the legal size limit, but it turns out you can buy this tag without first purchasing a fishing license but the tag is only applicable if you have also purchased a fishing license. Guess how many people get cited for fishing without a license in Texas because they simply have the extra red drum tag but not a fishing license, a bunch.There are some states with simpler regs, but there are also states with more complex regs.
Quote from: bigtex on August 15, 2018, 06:52:13 PMQuote from: jagermiester on August 15, 2018, 12:48:30 PMRight now it feels like I need a lawyer to help me navigate a complicated system so that I can harvest an animal or catch a fish that they don't really want me to take.People say this same thing in every state "the regs are too confusing." I've asked game wardens across the country this and they've all heard this.There are some states that don't even publish the actual season dates but rather state something along the lines of "Last Saturday in October extending for 25 days" and it is up to the hunter/angler to figure out the exact season.I was recently in Texas where you can buy an "extra red drum tag" which allows you to take a red drum over the legal size limit, but it turns out you can buy this tag without first purchasing a fishing license but the tag is only applicable if you have also purchased a fishing license. Guess how many people get cited for fishing without a license in Texas because they simply have the extra red drum tag but not a fishing license, a bunch.There are some states with simpler regs, but there are also states with more complex regs.We could go back a few years and see what they looked like then. The argument would then be: "why do they need to be so different now?"It would be a fun exercise in the justification of all these new rules and regs.
Quote from: KFhunter on August 15, 2018, 07:14:58 PMQuote from: bigtex on August 15, 2018, 06:52:13 PMQuote from: jagermiester on August 15, 2018, 12:48:30 PMRight now it feels like I need a lawyer to help me navigate a complicated system so that I can harvest an animal or catch a fish that they don't really want me to take.People say this same thing in every state "the regs are too confusing." I've asked game wardens across the country this and they've all heard this.There are some states that don't even publish the actual season dates but rather state something along the lines of "Last Saturday in October extending for 25 days" and it is up to the hunter/angler to figure out the exact season.I was recently in Texas where you can buy an "extra red drum tag" which allows you to take a red drum over the legal size limit, but it turns out you can buy this tag without first purchasing a fishing license but the tag is only applicable if you have also purchased a fishing license. Guess how many people get cited for fishing without a license in Texas because they simply have the extra red drum tag but not a fishing license, a bunch.There are some states with simpler regs, but there are also states with more complex regs.We could go back a few years and see what they looked like then. The argument would then be: "why do they need to be so different now?"It would be a fun exercise in the justification of all these new rules and regs. The root cause of complex regulations is usually trying to maximize opportunity in a very constrained environment."Closed" is a simple regulation.That said, Washington has some stupid rules put in place that penalize legal hunters under the auspices of catching poachers. Apparently game wardens in Wa are dumber than all the wardens in the rest of the northwest.
Quote from: idahohuntr on August 15, 2018, 07:53:57 PMQuote from: KFhunter on August 15, 2018, 07:14:58 PMQuote from: bigtex on August 15, 2018, 06:52:13 PMQuote from: jagermiester on August 15, 2018, 12:48:30 PMRight now it feels like I need a lawyer to help me navigate a complicated system so that I can harvest an animal or catch a fish that they don't really want me to take.People say this same thing in every state "the regs are too confusing." I've asked game wardens across the country this and they've all heard this.There are some states that don't even publish the actual season dates but rather state something along the lines of "Last Saturday in October extending for 25 days" and it is up to the hunter/angler to figure out the exact season.I was recently in Texas where you can buy an "extra red drum tag" which allows you to take a red drum over the legal size limit, but it turns out you can buy this tag without first purchasing a fishing license but the tag is only applicable if you have also purchased a fishing license. Guess how many people get cited for fishing without a license in Texas because they simply have the extra red drum tag but not a fishing license, a bunch.There are some states with simpler regs, but there are also states with more complex regs.We could go back a few years and see what they looked like then. The argument would then be: "why do they need to be so different now?"It would be a fun exercise in the justification of all these new rules and regs. The root cause of complex regulations is usually trying to maximize opportunity in a very constrained environment."Closed" is a simple regulation.That said, Washington has some stupid rules put in place that penalize legal hunters under the auspices of catching poachers. Apparently game wardens in Wa are dumber than all the wardens in the rest of the northwest.Each state has "stupid rules".Some of the states in the Midwest require your license be displayed on your back at all times.Some states require your name be attached to your tree-stand/blind.Some states require every big game animal taken be inspected by some government official in order for the tag to be "official."A couple states still ban hunting on Sundays
Washington doesn't have wardens.meh, no reason to attack WDFW Police, they don't write the rules. My point is WDFW Olympia is a self serving bureaucracy, in another thread we're all talking about the increase in licenses and tags and request for more funds "to being back services that declined or went away since the recession" but it's not to gain access, open roads, improve habitat or to in any way make things better for hunting, fishing, or outdoor recreation...it's all to fund the behemoth in Olympia (and grow it) so they can churn out more and more regulations.
I do have sympathy for WDFW in that Olympia jacked their funding for whatever they spend it on. Thus, I'm all for an across the board tax on every citizen in WA to manage their property and wildlife as opposed to lumping a huge portion on sportsmen and then given everyone a say in every cute animal management plan.So, either everyone pays or only those who pay have a say. I'm good with either approach.
Focus heavily on improving hunting access. It is so critical to retention, recruitment and the future of hunting it should be the highest priority program in WDFW. Some specifics:1. Get rid of the hunt by permission scam...and any loopholes that allow people to enroll in programs that don't actually give average sportsmen much benefit. 2. Substantially increase funding to pay for access agreements. Prioritize long term agreements to large land tracts.3. Incentivize landowners to provide access...tax breaks, habitat work, patrols, maybe even limited numbers of tags.4. Setup a committee of sportsmen to prioritize how access funding is spent.Frankly, if wdfw said they needed 30 million to open up all the private western wa timberlands and a bunch of other areas in this state, I'd drive to Olympia to advocate on their behalf. 30 million to pay a bunch of wolf facilitators, management positions etc...they can pound sand.