Danny, one example of a problem area is centered on Ithaca. There is relatively little public access, several thousand acres of Cornell U. campus, research farms and forests, suburban sprawl etc. Much of the area has deer populations well over 100 per square mile when 15-16 is likely the correct density.
The Focused Deer Management Area there has a daily bag limit of two anterless deer per day in any open deer season with no possession limit. The archery, regular and late archery/muzzleloading seasons run from 1 October to 18 December and there is an additional season in January.
Other than the aggressive deer management program at Cornell the only place most folks can access for hunting is two state parks with archery hunting only so I think the target herd reduction for this year(the first year) is still only 10% or so.
Part of the Cayuga-Thompkins Co-operative Hunting Area is in the focused harvest area so that is an option too.
http://www.dec.ny.gov/outdoor/71870.htmlCome on down and thin a few out....
In the Village of Lansing the controlled archery hunting to thin the herd actually sometimes results in hunters set up on decks and patios with the homeowners watching out the patio windows with their morning coffee. I am only just getting involved with the village hunt. If things go well the Venison Donation Coalition will be getting some extra deer from me this year.
You are correct in that "parcelization" of once rural lands has resulted in significant loss of hunting area. Our town is basically on 1 mile square road grids. When you draw the 500' bubble around each all the recently built homes it cuts the huntable space down quite dramatically.
Lance