While the WDFW hunting and license increase failed the legislature has appropriated more general fund (taxes) money to WDFW.
In the 2017-19 budget which wraps up on June 30th the legislature appropriated WDFW with $46,000,000 per year in general fund funding. For the 20-21 budget the legislature has appropriated WDFW with $74,000,000 for 20 and $63,000,000 for 21. Additionally, the federal government's funding of WDFW has increased from $118,000,000 to $141,000,000. The only funding source seeing a noticeable decrease is the wildlife account (license fees) which will decrease by $3,000,000.
Now with all that increased general fund funding comes some pet projects associated with it, such as:
-Roughly half a mill for fire suppression costs on WDFW lands
-Half a mill to counties for PILT payments
-Over a million to fund the new Orca whale programs and laws
-Half a mill for pinto abalone research
-3.5 mill per year for increased hatcher salmon production to increase prey available for orcas
-Between 1.7-2.2 mil per year to be granted from WDFW to tribes for the operation of tribal hatcheries to increase prey availability for orca whales
-Half mill for utility district hatcheries to increase prey availability for orcas
Key take aways:
-The big topic this year was orcas. Anything associated with protecting orcas will get $$
-No pet projects towards actual fur/feather species
-More tax $ to an agency means the general public essentially has a bigger say, sportsman are starting to fund WDFW less and less the past few years. This reverses a trend in the mid 2000s where sportsman were funding a larger percentage of the agency. The $ controls the decisions 