Free: Contests & Raffles.
Don’t the treaties say “in common with” for hunting off the reservation?
Lot of misunderstanding and misinformation in some of these posts...let me clarify a few things:Elk are native to most of North America, including the Blue Mountains in Oregon and Washington. Overharvest and unregulated hunting in the middle 1800's drove elk to near extinction in much of the Northwest. Elk were brought back as a result of several conservation measures including transplants from Yellowstone. Tribes have treaties with the United States - those treaties supersede state law and thus do not require Tribes to have any permission or cooperation with state fish and game agencies. Those treaties reserved the right to harvest elk - nothing about them limited tribes to any particular method or technology. The rights to hunt and fish were not limited to just the reservation boundaries...it explicitly included areas off reservation. Nearly everything I mention above has been adjudicated in the Supreme Court.All that said, of course co-management would be desirable for everyone, but we won't get anywhere if non-tribal attitudes are that Tribes need to follow state law or that non-tribal hunters should have the same rights and opportunities as tribal hunters. I don't state this as my opinion of what is right/wrong - just the facts as I see them.