Title: | The Hunting Notesfile |
Notice: | Registry #7, For Sale #15, Success #270 |
Moderator: | SALEM::PAPPALARDO |
Created: | Wed Sep 02 1987 |
Last Modified: | Tue Jun 03 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 1561 |
Total number of notes: | 17784 |
All hunters and fishermen/women of Colorado, please be aware of House Bill 1187 that will increase and in most cases double our license fees. A bill is before the Senate that will double small game, fishing, and combination licenses. Other licenses will see an increase too. Turkey licenses will double, and deer, elk, and antelope licenses will go up $5 - $10. Habitat stamps are also being considered. An extra tax on hunting, fishing, and related sporting goods is also on the table. I'm all for improving the hunting and fishing in this state, I contribute to them on my tax return every year. Yea, I know thats for non-game species but the game species have got to benifit from it. The DOW budget is too fat now and they are not spending the money they have in the right places. Ever go by any of the offices? Lots of overhead in them. Last year they charged us an extra $3.00 per person to process our limited license applications. Now $3.00 x a conservative 100,000 applications = $300,000 for processing licenses. Add that to the interest they earn while they have our money for 3 - 4 months, we're talking $500,000 +. This is money over and above what they are budgeted. The last 3 or 4 winters have been so mild that they haven't had to pay out for game damage or to feed the wildlife. Haven't seen any big stocking programs going on in the lakes around here. Where is the money going? There are two locations in town, Shoot'n Den and Suters Gun Shop, that have petitions to sign, if you are against these increases. They have to take them to Denver this Wednesday, 3-8-89, to the senate hearing. If you want your vote counted get by one of these locations today, or call your Senator. They are: District Name Phone 9 Mike Bird 594-9206 10 Ray Powers 596-1055 11 Jeff Wells 471-4110 12 Mary Ann Tebedo 471-2561
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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369.1 | More bucks for more bucks? | ATEAM::AYOTTE | Mon Mar 06 1989 13:52 | 8 | |
Just a curious observer.... but how much are they "soaking" you for a resident license to hunt and fish (include add-ons like primitive weapons licenses or bird stamps). One obvious problem that you folks must have as opposed to New Englanders is that there are fewer sportsmans dollars per square mile of habitat that needs to be managed. Or is this not the case? Dave | |||||
369.2 | CSC32::WATERS | The Agony of Delete | Tue Mar 07 1989 17:47 | 42 | |
What we don't put in licenses we put into the economy. reprint with out permission: Sportsmen add $79.3 million to '88 economy More hunters and fishermen live in El Paso County than in any other county in Colorado. Although 90 percent of them pursue their sport outside the county, hunters and fishermen added $79.3 million to the county economy in 1988, according to a report prepared for hte Colorado Division of Wildlife. .. Hunters and fishermen contributed more than $1.2 Billion to the Colorado economy in 1988, said Ford Frick, project director. Tourism brought $5. billion to the state last year and skiing made up 1.9 billion of that, said a spokeswoman for the Colorado Ski Country USA. ... Almost one in every 12 county residents in 1988 had license to hunt big game, such as deer and elk. Ninety-five percent of these 30,726 local hunters went elsewhere, but not before contributing the lion's share of the $8.01 million that big game hunters spent here in 1988. ... The department of Wildlife spent $870,000 in 1988 to administer its hunting and fishing program in El Paso County. ... License break down: El Paso County: 116,448 licenses Denver County: 100,137 licenses Arapahoe county: 93,659 " Boulder County: 59,838 " El Paso County break down: Fishing: 71,568 Big Game: 30,726 Small Game: 14,154 |