Finally some outrage in the face of the DNR. "State conservation officials should re-evaluate their deer population formulas and stop encouraging hunters to kill antlerless deer, hunters and lawmakers said during a hearing Thursday."Hunters pack Capitol over deer huntBy Todd Richmond, Associated Press Writer, found at Fox11online.com
Thursday, 17 Dec 2009MADISON, Wis. (AP) - State conservation officials should re-evaluate their deer population formulas and stop encouraging hunters to kill antlerless deer, hunters and lawmakers said during a hearing Thursday.
The hunters and lawmakers pounded away at the Department of Natural Resources for hours, blaming the agency's herd control measures for a weak November gun hunt. The agency's overzealous strategies have led to so many dead deer they have put Wisconsin's $1 billion-a-year deer hunting heritage is in jeopardy, they said.
"We run the risk of ruining this state's great deer hunting tradition for our sons and daughters," said Tom Klieman, a Kewaunee hunter and member of Northeastern Wisconsin Concerned Deer Hunters.
DNR Secretary Matt Frank told lawmakers the agency knows hunters are frustrated. The agency suspended its contentious earn-a-buck strategies going into the 2009 hunts and has proposed raising the population goals in more than a dozen hunting zones in 2010.
"I know there is frustration out there," he said.
Deer hunters have seethed about the DNR's regulations for decades. But that anger exploded in November after hunters killed only about 195,000 deer, down 29 percent from 2008.
They insist the DNR has inflated herd estimates for years. The agency based its herd control strategies on those estimates, including earn-a-buck regulations, which require a hunter kill an anterless deer before taking a buck, more antlerless tags and extra seasons wrapped around the traditional November hunt. The moves have devastated the herd and left hunters empty-handed, they say.
Legislators heading into an election year have tapped into the uproar. Senate Majority Leader Russ Decker, D-Weston, called earlier this month for every DNR employee involved with deer management to be fired, a move Frank rejected.
The state Assembly and Senate natural resources committee set up the hearing Thursday to listen to the DNR's explanations. Hunters, many dressed in camouflage and blaze orange, jammed the room.
Lawmakers took turns telling Frank how hundreds of their constituents are fed up with the agency.
Sen. Neal Kedzie, R-Elkhorn, said he has compiled 385 pages of complaints. Rep. Amy Sue Vruwink, D-Milladore, said constituents asked her if they could get their license fees back because they didn't see any deer this fall.
One hunter after another insisted the DNR's deer population figures are flawed. The herd hasn't been large enough to support reduction strategies for almost a decade, they said.
"Do they actually go outdoors? Do they look?" Jeff Mitchell, a hunter from Brodhead, said outside the hearing. "You have to quit shooting so many does."
Ron Kulas, legislative liaison for the Wisconsin Bowhunters Association, told the DNR to bring in third party experts to review their population formula. The agency also needs to study how predators such as wolves and bears have affected deer statewide, he said.
"It has everything to do with math, statistics, counting," Kulas said.
Rep. Scott Gunderson, R-Waterford, questioned why DNR's biologists didn't realize the reduction strategies were working years ago, especially since hunters started telling the agency they weren't seeing deer in the woods. He said it would make sense to scale back to only the 9-day traditional season for five years.
Frank acknowledged the herd has shrunk in some areas, due in part to recent harsh winters and agency herd control strategies. The deer harvest across the upper Midwest is down this year, he added, noting Minnesota saw a 12 percent decline and Michigan a 10 percent to 20 percent drop, he said.
He noted the agency dropped earn-a-buck requirements across much of the state going into the 2009 hunts, reduced antlerless tags, tabled a plan to extend the 9-day hunt to 16 days next year and has proposed higher population goals in 13 management zones next year.
The agency also is working to improve population calculations and hopes to research predator impacts and deer deforestation, Frank said.
"I think we are listening," he said. "Look at our actions."
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