Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Hey, state of Washington FUCK YOU!

How about instead of cutting WDFW public services and jobs just stop wasting all the money we already give you.  Give all license and conservation money paid by the public to enjoy the resources they already own to WDFW.  And while you're at it declare Tim Eyman persona non grata in the state.  Maybe we could continue to fish a little bit.  Rabble-B


State proposes hunting, fishing license increase

By ALLEN THOMAS, The Vancouver Columbian

State wildlife officials have drafted a blueprint for the first across-the-board increase in hunting and fishing license fees in 14 years.
A resident freshwater fishing license would jump from $26 to $29.50 and a combination freshwater-saltwater-shellfish resident license from $48.20 to $54.25. An elk license would increase from $45.20 to $57, while a deer license would decrease from $45.20 to $44.90.
While most licenses would cost more, fees for youth, seniors and disabled veterans would decrease.
Increases in commercial fishing fees also are proposed.
The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife is facing a $10 million to $20 million shortfall in state General Fund money plus about a $10 million reduction in the state Wildlife Account, which mostly comes from license revenue, in the 2011-13 budget cycle.
Phil Anderson, department director, said cuts might include 20 wildlife enforcement jobs, closure of seven to 11 fish hatcheries, elimination of steelhead fishing in Puget Sound tributaries and closure of some of the agency's 700 public access areas.
Anderson is making appearances around the state explaining the potential license increases and seeking reaction. New license fees require action by the state Legislature.
"We've got to have relatively broad-base support or the Legislature isn't going to buy it and we're going to be faced with a whole bunch of cuts,'' Anderson told the Columbia River recreational and commercial advisory groups in Vancouver recently.
The department is looking at a variety of ways to increase revenue to maintain its programs status quo, he said.
Other revenue measures, besides a license fee increase, are:
* Switching the money from saltwater fishing, shellfish and razor clam licenses from the General Fund (where it can be used for any purpose) to the state Wildlife Account. That would help to the tune of $3 million a biennium.
* Switching commercial license fees from the General Fund to the department. That would add about $2 million.
* Adding a commercial fishing license "administrative fee'' of either $70 or $105 per license.
* Charging a fee for Hydraulics Permit Approvals, the environmental review required to work in state waterways. The fee would provide $3.3 million.
* Creating an "Explore Washington Pass'' with the state Department of Natural Resources.
The pass would be required to use the 5 million acres of lands managed by the departments of Fish and Wildlife and Natural Resources.
Anderson said the pass would cost $5 for hunting or fishing license buyers and $40 for others age 18 and older.
One- and three-day passes would be available.
State lawmakers early this year approved a 10 percent surcharge on hunting and fishing license fees, but that ends on June 30, 2011.
An $8.75 annual Columbia River salmon-steelhead endorsement was initiated in 2010.
That would continue, but drop to $7.10 for youth under this proposal.
Anderson said the last general fee increase was in 1996.
The proposed fee increases got a mixed reaction from the advisory groups.



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