Free: Contests & Raffles.
Abolish WDFW?!?By Andy Walgamott Abolish the Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife!?To some it might seem a gift from on high, and a bill introduced in Olympia yesterday aims to do just that.Senate Bill 6813, sponsored by a trio of central Pugetropolis Democrats — Senators Tom, Rockefeller and Shin — would abolish “the department of fish and wildlife and transfers its powers, duties, and functions to the department of natural resources.”It would do away with State Parks Commission and move that department to DNR as well.Reform of natural resource agencies has been brewing for awhile. Last year, Gov. Gregoire asked numerous departments to come up with ideas on how to reform management, reduce costs and improve service delivery in light of the state’s $9 billion budget shortfall.However, in December, a panel recommended to her that WDFW, DNR and other departments not be bundled. Instead, WDFW would work to unify instate regions, smooth permitting, better coordinate fieldwork and identify redundancies between it, DNR and DOE.The cutoff for bills to move out of Senate committees is midnight, Feb. 5. It must then be passed out of the full Senate by Feb. 16.We’ve got calls in to learn more about the bill’s odds as well as the rationale behind it.EDITOR’S NOTE: AN EARLIER VERSION OF THIS MISSTATED THE DEADLINE TO MOVE THIS BILL OUT OF THE SENATE’S NATURAL RESOURCES, OCEANS & RECREATION COMMITTEE.
Unfortunately I think the DNR is even greener than WDFW
Wouldn't it be wonderful to transfer the WDFWs duties to the one entity even more responsible for Colockum elk herds decimation than the indians. My .02
Quote from: Elkaholic daWg on February 04, 2010, 09:28:11 AM Wouldn't it be wonderful to transfer the WDFWs duties to the one entity even more responsible for Colockum elk herds decimation than the indians. My .02Which entity is that
Bad idea, I imagine a hidden goal of this would be to eliminate the commission, as I believe there was already a push to do this by the Dem's and Gregoire. I think it just bugs them to know end that they KNOW better and that someone not anointed by them has any say in wildlife management. DNR controlling wildlife management would put the power back in the hands of the legislators.While the commission is not perfect, it is better than putting it in the hands of an appointed government official who's job is dependent on the goodwill of the government. No check and balance in that.Shootmoore