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Montana loses $16 million in archery elk drawing

by Marc Minard
| August 17, 2011 1:00 AM

The 2011 archery elk permit drawing results are in, and for some it was a day of reward and excitement.  For others there was disappointment in not drawing a permit for this year. For Montana it was an economic bloodletting. 

Over $16 million dollars in economic activity has been lost due to residents and non-residents who wanted to archery hunt in Montana but could not draw the permit. Limitations on permits are not based on conservation concerns, as all of the hunting districts involved are either at or over published population objectives for elk.

In 2008, in a very controversial decision, the Fish, Wildlife & Parks commission decided to move from unlimited to limited archery elk permits for the Missouri Breaks. The rationale given included a number of factors, none of which had to do with abundance (or lack of) elk as populations are larger than desired. This action spurred a furious debate, but in the end it passed with no one really knowing what the impact would be. 

Then in 2010 the commission further reduced archery hunting opportunity in 22 additional hunting districts where elk were at or over the management objective. Taken together, 29 hunting districts, or 36 percent of the land mass of Montana, are now managed under a limited permit system. All of them enjoy an abundance of elk.

Now in 2011, we find that 1, 854 resident hunters and 1,989 non-residents, who had already obtained hunting licenses, put in for archery permits but were not drawn.

These 3,843 hunters would have come to rural Montana to hunt and would have spent money on motels, restaurants, travel and incidentals that provides desperately needed economic activity and benefits for families in communities that are struggling financially. 

Using economic multipliers provided by Fish, Wildlife & Parks the estimated lost economic impact in 2011 alone is over $7 million. Since 2009, Montana has lost an estimated $16.4 million in spending by elk archery hunters who did not draw a special permit. 

Several things are of concern. To recklessly forgo significant hunting opportunities for residents and non-residents in the face of biological surplus should be highly disturbing to the hunting community.

The loss of $16.7 million in economic activity during these tough times should make every Montanan question the wisdom of this practice. 

The commission’s decision to limit permits, and their continued interest in reducing them even more, drew the attention of the legislature this past session. HB 361 called for the roll back of permit levels to 2007 levels. HB 361 narrowly failed primarily because legislators were reluctant to “micromanage” the commission’s business. There was a belief among some that the commission would revisit and reverse its decision to severely limit hunting opportunity in areas where elk were over objective but that has not happened.

Some of the 1,854 resident hunters, and a few of the 1,989 non-resident hunters, will choose to hunt elsewhere in Montana, crowding into districts that still afford opportunity during a general season. In seeking opportunity elsewhere, they take the economic benefit away from communities that desperately need it and take harvest away from elk populations that can sustain it.

This is not just a resident versus non-resident issue as over 1,800 Montana resident hunters were denied the opportunity to archery hunt elk in areas where elk abundance is sufficient to sustain that pressure. 

The commission process is dominated by special interest groups and individuals who claim to represent Montana Sportsmen. When was the last time a “self-proclaimed representative” asked what you thought?

Like a growing number of frustrated Montanans I do not understand why the commission continues to recklessly forgo sustainable hunting opportunities and cripple small-town economies.

Mac Minard

Clancy, Montana