Published February 15, 2011, 05:05 PM
DNR proposes Minnesota license fee increasesUnder the proposal, a resident angling license would go from $17 to $24, and a resident deer license would go from $26 to $30.
By: Sam Cook, Duluth News Tribune
http://www.duluthnewstribune.com/event/article/id/191527/The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources launched a campaign today to increase fishing and hunting license fees. The license fee increase is also part of Gov. Mark Dayton’s budget proposal that was released today.
Under the proposal, a resident angling license would go from $17 to $24, and a resident deer license would go from $26 to $30. Several new kinds of licenses would be offered as well, such as 90-day resident angling license ($18), a half-price ($12) youth fishing license for 16- and 17-year-olds and an $18 spearing-only license.
License revenue is the primary way Minnesota pays for fish and wildlife management. Tax money from the state’s general fund pays for only a tiny fraction of those operations.
Any fee increase would have to be approved by the Minnesota Legislature. Leaders of the Environment and Natural Resources committees in both the Senate and the House have said they would consider fishing and hunting price increases, but not for a couple of years.
The DNR’s Game and Fish Fund, derived from license fees, is dwindling and is projected to have a negative balance by 2014, according to DNR officials. Minnesota’s $17 basic fishing license ranks 36th among all states. At their annual roundtable meeting with stakeholders in January, DNR officials laid out the case for raising license fees. Without raising those fees soon, they said, the agency would have to make “significant cuts” to programs.
Fishing license fees were last raised in 2001, and hunting license fees were last raised significantly in 2000. Currently, the DNR is operating with 100 of about 600 full-time positions unfilled. The Division of Enforcement is down 25 conservation officers.
The governor’s budget also includes a new Hunting and Fishing Heritage Initiative that recommends allocating $6.4 million to the DNR in fiscal year 2012 and $9.4 million in fiscal 2013. Those funds would be used to pay for basic DNR operations, said Ed Boggess, director of the DNR’s Division of Fish and Wildlife. Some of that money would be used to fill positions that currently remain open.
Following is a sampling of other license proposals:
- Add a three-day resident angling license (no trout stamp needed), $12
- Add a youth darkhouse spearing-only license, $12
- Combination (husband/wife) angling license would increase from $25 to $40
- Eliminate the conservation and conservation combination licenses that allow anglers a half-limit of fish
- Increase non-resident individual angling license from $39.50 to $41
- Increase resident small-game hunting license from $19 to $22
- Add a three-day resident small-game license for $14
- Add a resident small-game annual license that includes state stamps, $37
- Increase resident turkey license from $23 to $26
- Add a resident individual Super Sport license package (angling, small game, deer, duck, pheasant and trout) for $99
- Increase resident sport license (angling and small game) from $29.50 to $43
For a complete list of license proposals go to the DNR website at
www.mndnr.gov and look for “Hunting and Fishing Heritage Initiative.”