Points taken, like I said, it wouldn't happen overnight, but even according to WDFW we are headed that direction, as far as being primarily a lottery based hunting State, that is the only reason I polled on this one, because this topic has made a lot of headlines this year. Your example of 4,000 hunter's losing out is probably not the way it would work out. Speaking strictly about one GMU like Mission, you would likely have 500 doe permits, 300 youth and disabled permits and another 200 buck permits, more like 1,000 , or more total spread out over all types of weapons, that's just hypothetical. I did work for a County Bio. as a habitat technician for several years and am still involved with habitat work today, it's something I've studied a little. You are exactly right about "pre-emptive" management, why wait until a unit has an issue to manage it for the best quality beforehand? I'm curious, what type of deer do you annually harvest in the NE corner? From what I've seen, the average deer there is a smallish whitetail buck, in 15 years of hunting there. I did not even see a mature muley alive up there until after the three point rule, always just dinker spikes, forky's before the rule change. Statewide harvest success runs about 22%-24% on deer. That means, of the 4,000 people you stated are hunting Mission, over 3,000 of them now go home with a fistfull of you know what every year. I can hike around in the woods any day of the week without buying a licence, or tag and not harvest a deer, pointless. If 1,000 lottery tag holder's go into the woods in one unit, harvest 850 deer, when previously 4,000 people would harvest the same amount of deer in the same unit AND you could reflect that type of success rate in every unit of this State, Washington would rank up there with Idaho, Montana, etc.. I really believe it is possible.