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New Bill Would Let Landowners Sell Their Big-Game Tags for a Profit in Wyoming

New Bill Would Let Landowners Sell Their Big-Game Tags for a Profit in Wyoming

Yahoo28-01-2025

In Wyoming, landowners receive big-game hunting tags to help maintain wildlife habitat and wildlife managment goals on their property. That's nothing new. What is new is what they might be able to do with those tags if an introduced bill passes the state legislature. Senate Bill 118, which is being spearheaded by a newly elected legislator, aims to make those tags transferrable, meaning landowners could sell them to whoever they wanted.
'This is a step too far,' Wyoming Wildlife Federation government affairs director Jess Johnson told Outdoor Life Monday during a break between legislative sessions. 'This is a step in the wrong cultural direction for sportsmen. We cannot let this go through.'
Under Wyoming's current allocation system, landowners are eligible for a pair of draw-only tags — including two each for elk, deer, pronghorn, and turkey — for every 160 acres they own. This 160-acre minimum was also the standard used for Western homesteaders in the late 1800s under the Homestead Act, so it's still a common parcel size today.
Those landowners must also prove that wildlife inhabit and utilize their properties. For a wild herd of elk, that amounts to a minimum of 500 elk on the property for at least four days a year. Legislators who support the bill (some of whom are large landowners themselves) say that making tags transferrable can help ranchers diversify their income streams during tough times. The current bill does not mention any caps on the amount those tags could go for.
'Ranchers are hurting right now,' Laura Pearson, a Wyoming Senator and sheep rancher based in Kemmerer, told WyoFile. 'It'd give ranchers and farmers the ability to sell or give those tags to whomever we want.'
Read Next: Film: Public-Land Elk Hunters and Ranchers Can Be Good Neighbors. Here's How
In an interview with Cowboy State Daily, executive vice president of Wyoming Stock Growers Association Jim Magnana said the group supports the idea of giving landowners more options for their tags.
'But it's a complex issue,' he acknowledged. 'And there needs to be some work on the details.'
The bill in its current form designates Wyoming Game and Fish Commission as the governing entity for the new landowner tag resale program. But Johnson said that in a surprise move on Jan. 23, the bill hopped committees, moving from the Travel, Recreation, Wildlife and Cultural Resources Committee to the Agriculture, State and Public Lands and Water Resources Committee.
'I'm incredibly worried about it. Most of the time our wildlife and hunting bills go through our Wildlife Committee, but this bill was re-routed to ag,' Johnson explained. 'I hope landowners with tags in the legislature recuse themselves from the vote because it is such a conflict of interest. If this passes there will be areas in this state that go almost entirely to landowners [with no limited draw tags left for the public.]'
The proposed legislation also comes amid a larger push for transferrable landowner tags in the West and other states. This worries everyday hunters, who say the practice is essentially privatizing the public's wildlife. They point to a state like New Mexico, where elk tags are sold by landowners to the highest bidders and can fetch up to $12,000, as proof of their concerns. And they say the recent Senate bill in Wyoming is an attempt to drive a wedge between the two most vocal, and sizable, constituencies in the Cowboy State.
Read Next: Report Finds That New Mexico's Elk Licensing System Favors Wealthy Landowners and Out-of-Staters Over Residents
'Most of the time agriculture and sportsmen get along really well. Sportsmen know ag helps the creatures we love here,' Johnson said. 'That said, landowner tag transfer is such a decisive issue here that many in ag also view it as an issue that further separates sportsmen from ag in a time when we are trying to make sure our working landscapes continue in the future.'
The Wyoming Game and Fish Department issued 3,507 landowner licenses statewide last year at $39 apiece, according to a fiscal note accompanying the bill, which doesn't mention for which species or how many applications WGFD received. But Johnson says that if the bill passes, that number is likely to go way up.
'A lot of landowners don't hunt, but if you put a monetary value on this, that's going to incentivize landowners to put in.'

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What to know about inspections of Iran's nuclear program by the IAEA ahead of a key board vote
What to know about inspections of Iran's nuclear program by the IAEA ahead of a key board vote

Hamilton Spectator

time27 minutes ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

What to know about inspections of Iran's nuclear program by the IAEA ahead of a key board vote

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Dan Patrick on THC ban, school choice + more in Abilene
Dan Patrick on THC ban, school choice + more in Abilene

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Dan Patrick on THC ban, school choice + more in Abilene

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All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Ukraine says Russia launched the biggest overnight drone bombardment of the war
Ukraine says Russia launched the biggest overnight drone bombardment of the war

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Ukraine says Russia launched the biggest overnight drone bombardment of the war

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A recent escalation in aerial attacks has coincided with a renewed Russian battlefield push along eastern and northeastern parts of the roughly 1,000-kilometer (620-mile) front line. Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said late Sunday that in some of those areas, 'the situation is very difficult.' He provided no details. Ukraine is short-handed on the front line against its bigger enemy and needs more military support from its Western partners, especially air defenses. But uncertainty about the U.S. policy on the war has fueled doubts about how much help Kyiv can count on. Ukraine has produced some stunning counter-punches, however. Its June 1 drone attack on distant Russian air bases was unprecedented in its scope and sophistication. 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Ukraine's intelligence chief, Kyrylo Budanov, said the exchange of bodies will begin this week. Long-range drone attacks continue Russia has repeatedly targeted civilian areas of Ukraine with Shahed drones during the war, as happened on Sunday night. The attacks have killed more than 12,000 Ukrainian civilians, according to the United Nations. Russia says it only attacks military targets. Ukraine has developed long-range drones that continue to strike deep inside Russia. Russia's Defense Ministry said it shot down 49 Ukrainian drones overnight over seven Russian regions. Two drones hit a plant specializing in electronic warfare equipment in the Chuvashia region, located more than 600 kilometers (370 miles) east of Moscow, local officials reported. ___ Arhirova contributed from the Chernihiv region. ___ Follow AP's coverage of the war in Ukraine at Illia Novikov And Hanna Arhirova, The Associated Press

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