Do yourself a favor and go read the Refuge Forums post ThatGuy linked in page 7. Multiple NRs telling residents how this state needs to be run. The resident waterfowlers are fed up with the unrelenting pressure on state WMAs by NRs. There is a bit of ground swell over there to reach out and contact the commission with our concerns. I see much of the same concerns here. I have reached out to every commissioner. I don’t believe in banning NRs but lotteries and increased NR fees for NR waterfowlers and deer hunters need to be implemented. Increased NR fees along with outfitters being required to be licensed and pay an outfitters license will more than make up for any perceived revenue lost by limiting NRs. The outfitters are making bank on a public resource and pay nothing to do it. The time is NOW! Write your commissioners, attend the ZOOM meeting on 01/14/21. Were on the precipice of losing what we all love to do to the highest bidder. It’s time to take back our state.
I think we can agree that if all or most of us do nothing - then nothing will change. I do think (with all due respect) that you are a bubble off plumb IRT the "how", assuming the primary target is still reining in the ongoing deer leasing mania that is crowding out KS resident hunters of all ilks. Specifically, Increasing fees on NR deer hunters, and on outfitters, won't help - a few hundred or even thousands of dollars in expense added to what they already shell out without blinking won't slow many of them down a bit. Worse - those added funds will likely go to KDWPT "operating costs" - meaning, would be yet another financial incentive to the Department to - you got it - sell more of our deer.
Below is the note I wrote (with great input from Chestle and Birdman2). I've sent it to each of the seven Commissioners who pretty much run this railroad, and will post here (unless I'm asked not to) any replies I get. I'll hazard a guess the silence IRT a single inquiry of this nature will be deafening - so pile on, please, if you wish. It could only help - but I presume they serve at the pleasure of the Governor who appointed them (hint for KS residents!). I'd also invite your attention to the link kindly provided by Chestle summarizing current proposed legislation related to this topic. If you doubt that KDWPT (good people all, I am quite certain) could benefit from a bit more transparency and more effective oversight (and maybe an occasional reminder that the good people of Kansas SHOULD be their primary constituency) - note in the legislative initiatives how many - pretty much all with real meat - were submitted by the KDWPT itself. Several, perhaps most, are not focused on the wildlife resources, but on expanding the already substantial authority and autonomy of the Department. Further, I'd bet that most get approved essentially as is, and then routinely passed by the legislature. Not my first rodeo, one might say.
So - here's what I sent to the seven Commissioners (repeated from above, so you don't have to scroll back IF you choose to send some variant yourself):
Dear Commissioner,
A grave disservice is being done to the citizens of Kansas. Your help is required to remedy this problem.
The very high number of non-resident deer licenses being offered by KDWPT has driven an exponential increase in the number of acres leased to outfitters and the like, effectively removing access to a many working Kansans - not only for purposes of deer hunting, but for other uses such as upland bird hunting which once benefited much larger numbers of Kansans. Perhaps even worse, diversion of land usage to deer leases appears to have significantly reduced the acreage that landowners are willing to enroll in the excellent WIHA programs that provided excellent access to so many Kansans and non-Kansans alike, stressing the remaining WIHAs to the breaking point in many instances.
Kansans are well known for their generosity, but the de facto sale of our wildlife needs to end. We ask that you move to reduce the number of non-resident deer licenses, from over 1,000 for every state of the union during the 2018-2019 season, to no more than half that number. This will significantly improve both the quality and the quantity of access to this resource to local Kansas sportsmen and women, and help foster the next generation of Kansas hunters. Further, although Kansas wildlife is not (or at least, should not be) for sale, to ameliorate any adverse impact on landowners currently profiting from these deer leases, we recommend that landowners who demonstrate a reduction in farm/ranch income as a result of this action be provided the first opportunities to enroll their acreages in an expanded WIHA program - again benefiting native Kansans and non-residents alike through restoration of access.