Asking hunters
For the third time in four years, a commission appointed by the Legislature has issued recommendations on how to support the stateโs fiscally strapped Fish and Game Department. Funding remains stuck in the muzzleloader era despite repeated efforts to ram through changes.
This time around, with Democrats in control of the House and Senate, a few of the better recommendations should be enacted.
Fish and Game is the first agency of its kind to be established in the United States. It was formed shortly after the end of the Civil War, when there was a hunter or angler in almost every household. It made perfect sense a century ago to fund the agency with license fees, but theyโve fallen short for decades.
Fish and Gameโs budget, now $32 million, is chronically in shortfall. The Wildlife Management Institute estimates that only about 4 percent of Americans hold a hunting license and 14 percent buy a fishing license. New Hampshire Fish and Game once sold 85,000 hunting licenses, $32 each at todayโs price, but last year sold just 55,000.
Meanwhile, what the public expects of Fish and Game has grown substantially. The agencyโs conservation officers, otherwise known as game wardens, are charged with rescuing lost hikers and boaters. Few involve people hunting or fishing.
Fish and Game oversees snowmobiling and trail riding on dirt bikes and ATVs. It owns 54,000 acres and leases another 19,000. It maintains 143 public boat ramps, operates fish ladders, six trout hatcheries and programs to restore non-game species, yet it gets no money from bird watchers, hikers and nature lovers who donโt hunt or fish.
The commission wants to broaden the agencyโs financial base. The best way to do that is to give up on the fiction that, in this day and age, an agency like Fish and Game can support itself by imposing user fees. The worst of the recommendations call for charging the users of non-motorized watercraft โ kayaks, canoes, paddleboards and the like โ a $10 annual fee. The fee would barely cover the cost of printing decals and overseeing and enforcing the program, so it would net little revenue. It would inconvenience and outrage countless owners of multiple canoes and kayaks, and send a terrible Big Brother message to the visitors who contribute dearly to the stateโs economy.
Other recommendations do have merit. It makes sense, for example, to let Fish and Game, rather than the stateโs court system, conduct hearings and collect and retain the fines from off-highway recreational vehicle violations.
Chief among the commissionโs recommendations, however, is a proposal to dedicate a small portion of the state Rooms and Meals tax to the agency. That oneโs a no-brainer. Everyone benefits from Fish and Gameโs care for the stateโs outdoors. Everyone should pay.
Concord Monitor
