Well then you haven't heard riden talking lately.
IMHO after reading the letter I'll take a wait and see attitude but will be keeping a close eye on the pilot project.
If somebody gives me hard evidence either way I'll evaluate then. Will be talking to Ty Lund to let him know my feelings on the matter.
The problem with this line of thinking is that no one can provide “black and white” answers to the Open Spaces proposal. The secrecy of the process has not allowed for meaningful stakeholder input and scrutiny, regardless of what the government would have you believe.
I think it is important to look at the proposal in its entirety and to compare it against its peers. RAMP is copied from the Montana Block model and HFH is basically imitates the Utah model. While most landowners view RAMP as a bit of a toothless dog, it does little if anything to compel landowners to grant hunters access to private properties. Further, it does not mitigate any concerns of landowners getting additional payments for exclusive use of their properties. I have communicated with hunters and landowners in Montana and they (especially the hunters) are not happy. This is an expensive program with little benefits to landowners or hunters and is vulnerable to abuse. If you know some Montanans, give them a call and get their take on the program.
The HFH proposal is the real devil. Landowners will get a sizeable number of tags, out of the current allotment, and will be allowed to sell them to whoever they want (they can become outfitters) for whatever the market will bear. Remember, wildlife is a public trust owned by all residents.
Much has been made about the so-called “comparable access” clause, which would grant resident hunters access to these never before hunted private properties. There is a huge problem here; nobody (SRD) will define the components of comparable access. I was at a meeting with SRD regarding Open Spaces and they ultimately conceded that a landowner would not likely give the same unfettered access to a resident with a draw tag versus a “customer” that had just paid $10,000 or more for one of their own antlered mule or elk or moose tags. It’s just bad business. The final word was – these things (comparable access) would have to be worked out on the local level between local landowners and hunters, after Open Spaces is put in place. It is not black and white, but I think the results of comparable access become pretty obvious.
Because the HFH tags are coming out of the current allotment is should also be noted that the likelihood of being successful in a draw (especially in these two pilot WMU’s) will effectively double. Instead of successfully drawing a WMU 108 antlered mule buck tag in four to five years, you can now expect to wait eight to ten years. Of course, you always have the option of forking over some big money for an HFH tag and you can hunt every year. It sure doesn’t seem too fair to the resident hunter or Albertan. If I recall correctly, landowners in Utah get close to 85% of all tags to sell. The Open Spaces group stated that Alberta does not want to go in the same direction as Utah, yet the have the car started and pointed in that direction.
The Open Spaces proposal has nothing to do with habitat and conservation; it may have started that way, but they have pulled those qualifiers. Open Spaces is about access for hunting and compensation to landowners. Regardless of the spin, I do not see any need to call it anything other than “Paid Hunting”.
I guess as hunters in Alberta, we have to ask ourselves if access is the biggest reason in the decline of hunters and if it is the big issue to us are we comfortable with paid hunting? I know that I have rarely had problems with access. Over the years, the landowners who have allowed access continue to allow access and those that refuse access continue to refuse access. It is their private property and I respect their decisions. There remains, a lot of Crown land in Alberta but it could get much busier.
Are you comfortable paying (directly or indirectly through license and tag increases, etc.) for the opportunity to access properties for hunting or for a tag for a public trust? Are you comfortable with perhaps doubling the time it takes to get drawn for a particular animal (8 to 10 years) while others are able to go out and purchase that very same tag every year? Is this fair to Albertans, all landowners and resident hunters? The choice is yours to make... or not make.