Q. What fees are increasing and exactly how much are they going
up?
A. License fees and some tag fees are increasing
across the board. View the 2004-2005 license
fees. Beginning in March of 2004, $3 of every annual license will
now go toward habitat improvement projects. Also, a separate $10 stamp
will be required for hunters who wish to hunt upland game.
Q. Why are you raising fees?
A. Over the years, the costs of managing wildlife,
and the programs that Nevada's hunters, anglers and boaters have come
to expect have increased, while the funds that support them have declined.
NDOW needed to increase fees in order to continue to support programs
and provide the level of service that our customers have come to expect.
The decision to increase license fees did not come lightly. But it
was necessary, and the Nevada Legislature agreed by approving these
increases.
True, you and I will have to dig a little deeper into our pockets
each year, but, the increases will also allow the wildlife conservation,
education, boating safety and other programs provided by NDOW to continue
unabated. Nobody likes to see increased fees, and if any other options
were available we would have taken them.
We streamlined the agency, removed a level of bureaucracy and increased
efficiency to the best of our ability prior to this increase. Even
with these most recent increases, the department remains one of the
smallest wildlife agencies in the United States with a workforce of
220 employees for the entire state. Our public expects certain products
and services from us, and in order to continue to deliver them we
needed the fee increases.
Additionally, costs are going up everywhere. Since 1996, the cost
of a gallon of gas has increased from about $1.19 to near $1.80 or
more, electricity costs have gone up, and the costs of vehicles and
other equipment are vastly higher than in 1996. All insurance costs
have increased.
Other demands and responsibilities such as sage grouse conservation
planning efforts and steps to monitor and educate about Chronic Wasting
Disease, have been a drain on agency resources.
Q. Who needs to purchase the Upland Game Bird Stamp, and how
will NDOW use these funds?
A. The Upland Game stamp is required of any person
12 or older who is hunting any upland game bird except dove, turkey
and crow. Funding from the $10 stamp will be accounted for separately
and will be used solely for the protection and propagation of upland
game birds, and for the acquisition, development and preservation
of upland game bird habitats in Nevada. This will include, but is
not limited to: development of range projects and developments
of water sources, such as guzzlers.
Upland game bird projects must be reviewed and approved by the Board
of Wildlife Commissioners. No more than 10 percent of the funding
may be used to reimburse the Department for the cost of administering
the documentation of the program.
Q. How will the dollars from the Habitat Conservation Fee be
spent?
A. The $3 Habitat Conservation Fee is incorporated
into any annual hunting, trapping, fishing, or combined hunting and
fishing license. This funding will be set aside to support wildlife
habitat rehabilitation and restoration efforts statewide.
Revenues from this fee will go towards habitat improvement projects
such as range rehabilitation, cheat grass eradication and fire rehabilitation
efforts. In addition, these dollars will also be used for a number
of aquatic habitat projects, including stream restoration, development
of fish structures in area waters to promote natural fish production,
riparian fencing in sensitive fisheries areas, minimum pool and in-stream
flow agreements, water right acquisitions and reservoir restoration
projects.
Q. I didn’t have any say in this. How did you get a fee
increase passed?
A. Many people were involved in the process and
supported the need for these increases. As always, public input was
gathered at county wildlife advisory board meetings, and meetings
of the Nevada Wildlife Commission. The Board of Wildlife Commissioners,
many sportsmen's groups, county wildlife advisory boards, and Nevada’s
legislators supported these necessary increases which allow the agency
to maintain its current wildlife and boating programs and services
that customers expect.
Q. Aren’t you always raising fees?
A. We take all fee increases very seriously, and
we do not want to burden the sporting public.
The last major license fee increase occurred in 1996 when resident
fishing licenses increased from $15.50 to $21.00. A few small, incremental
increases have taken place in the past five years in order to maintain
essential programs in desperate need of funding. (The fee for a trout
stamp increased in 2002 in order to support the costs of repairs and
renovations essential to keep our hatcheries up and running and supplying
a large percentage of the fish in Nevada's waters. A $3 predator management
fee was added to game application fees 2002 to fund programs needed
to deal with predator issues.)
Q. If you managed my tax dollars better, you wouldn't need
to raise fees, right?
A. The Department of Wildlife gets the majority
of its funding from sportsmen and boaters. We get only about 3% of
our $21 million budget from the state's general fund. We manage all
our dollars very, very carefully, and in fact, we are one of the smallest
wildlife agencies in the nation. In recent years we have streamlined
many programs to reduce costs while maintaining our effectiveness.
A little more than 1/3 of NDOW’s budget comes from license
fees and permits. About 1/3 comes from federal grants, such as the
Sport Fish and Wildlife Restoration Act, which raises revenues through
excise taxes on fishing equipment, the Pittman Robertson Act, which
raises revenues through excise taxes on firearms and ammunition, and
the Motor Boat Fuel Tax, which charges a tax on fuels to support boater
access programs in the state. The other 1/3 of NDOW’s budget
comes from grants, gifts and other donations.
Q. Why don’t you stop developing new programs and hiring
more employees, instead of increasing fees?
A. The new fee increases will cover current programs at current
staffing levels. No new programs, positions, or staff raises were
proposed. We manage wildlife on 110,000 square miles of land in Nevada
with one of the smallest wildlife agencies in the nation.
Q. What services am I paying for by purchasing a hunting license?
A. We carefully manage Nevada’s wildlife
resources for quality hunting. Your fees go towards the basic functions
that allow this agency to continue operating - like keeping the lights
on, fueling the vehicles that travel across the state to implement
wildlife programs, and the support staff to keep it all running. Hunting
license dollars also go towards programs that allow our biologists
to survey Nevada's wildlife populations - an essential step in evaluating
habitat and population numbers that ultimately affect NDOW recommendations
to the Nevada Wildlife Commission, as well as plans and partnerships
created to help support those wildlife populations.
Your fees are also going towards the increased services that, over
the years, the public has demanded and found very valuable - like
the development of online licensing, and information developments
like our web site, hunter information sheets and other wildlife publications
that provide you with valuable and useful information. Additionally,
a portion of the new fee will be dedicated to habitat programs that
support a variety of Nevada's wildlife populations.
By using these fees for our basic operations, we are able to take
advantage, and free up federal monies, in the form of grants which
allow us to maintain, improve or expand big and small game habitats
and many more programs that dedicated biologists implement to monitor
and sustain healthy wildlife populations in this state.
Q. What services am I paying for by purchasing a fishing license
and stamps?
A. By stocking area waters, our hatchery program
provides a huge percentage of all the fishing opportunities in Nevada.
Our fisheries biologists are constantly monitoring game fish and the
status of all our waters in the state, and providing that information
to the public. Without monitoring, stocking, enforcement, and the
biology behind fishing, we would have fewer good fishing opportunities
in Nevada.
Q. Why should I continue to purchase a license, for my family
or myself, after these fee increases?
A. Recreational hunting and fishing remain a great
value in entertainment in the state. Besides the value of the sport
itself, few activities bring families and generations together like
hunting and fishing. Plus, by buying a license, you support wildlife
in the state.
The outdoor experiences of fishing, boating, hunting or wildlife
viewing are invaluable. With its vast expanses of public lands and
open space, Nevada offers quality outdoor experiences that are unique
from those found in any other state. The bonds and memories created
between friends and families while participating in these activities
are priceless.
Experience Nevada's wildlife. It's worth it!