Legislature(1997 - 1998)

03/10/1998 01:10 PM House RES

Audio Topic
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
txt
HB 364 - GUIDES FOR NONRESIDENT MOOSE HUNTERS                                  
                                                                               
CO-CHAIRMAN OGAN announced the next order of business was House                
Bill Number 364, "An Act requiring nonresident hunters to be                   
accompanied when hunting moose; and providing for an effective                 
date."                                                                         
                                                                               
Number 2138                                                                    
                                                                               
TOM WRIGHT, Legislative Assistant to Representative Ivan M. Ivan,              
Alaska State Legislature, explained Representative Ivan is ill                 
today otherwise he would be here today.  He read the following                 
sponsor statement:                                                             
                                                                               
"The purpose of the bill is to require nonresident hunters to be               
accompanied in the field by a registered guide while hunting moose.            
The present moose antler restrictions for nonresident hunters - a              
50 inch minimum in most game management units - there are major                
conservation reasons for this guide requirement."                              
                                                                               
MR. WRITE said there is more to the sponsor statement.  It                     
primarily comes from a letter written by Peter Shepherd.  He could             
continue to read it or answer any questions of the committee                   
members.                                                                       
                                                                               
CO-CHAIRMAN OGAN announced he would open the meeting up to the                 
teleconference network.                                                        
                                                                               
Number 2184                                                                    
                                                                               
HERMAN MORGAN, Chairman, Central Kuskokwim Fish and Game Advisory              
Committee, testified via teleconference in Aniak.  He has been                 
involved with the committee for about 15 years, as chairman for 5              
years.  He is strongly in favor of the bill and so is the                      
committee.  In fact, it recently put a proposal to the Board of                
Game similar to the bill because of the growth of nonresident                  
hunters in the area, and the phenomenal amount of waste by them                
with no one being held responsible.  "If you or I did something                
like that, we'd be in big trouble.  But these people are just                  
getting away with it either through ignorance, inexperience, or                
just plain lack of caring."  If they were accompanied by an                    
experienced guide who knows how to take care of the meat, a lot of             
the waste could be stopped.  Right now, air transporters dump as               
many hunters as they can in one area, and when it is wiped out they            
move to another area.  "I though we were suppose to operate under              
the principle of sustained yield."                                             
                                                                               
Number 2271                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE NICHOLIA asked Mr. Morgan how many guides are there             
in the Aniak area.                                                             
                                                                               
Number 2288                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. MORGAN replied he is not sure.  There are a lot that come from             
the Lower Forty-Eight during the moose season.  They advertise on              
the Internet and it is getting out of hand.  There are too many and            
the moose should be taken care of.  The wolves are even becoming a             
problem.                                                                       
                                                                               
Number 2307                                                                    
                                                                               
CO-CHAIRMAN OGAN asked Mr. Morgan whether there has been a problem             
with sub-legal moose being left in the field in the Aniak area.                
                                                                               
Number 2312                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. MORGAN replied we have heard stories about guys shooting a sub-            
legal moose and leaving it.  They do not understand how to take                
care of the meat or what it takes.  If there was an experienced                
guide with them, it would stop a lot of this.                                  
                                                                               
Number 2330                                                                    
                                                                               
CO-CHAIRMAN OGAN stated there are problems in his area as well.                
There is a problem with the new antler restrictions.                           
                                                                               
Number 2351                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. MORGAN said there is such new technology that it is easy to                
spot a moose from a plane.  If it is not regulated it will hurt the            
resource when a lot depend on it to feed their families.  "Think               
how it makes us feel to see the meat go to waste," he said.                    
                                                                               
Number 2379                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE BEVERLY MASEK asked Mr. Morgan how long has he been             
noticing the problem.                                                          
                                                                               
Number 2390                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. MORGAN replied this has been going on for quite a while.                   
Before the "meat-and-bone" rule, a lot of the meat was being left              
out in the field.  The hunters would come back to the village with             
just the horns and a little bag of meat.  Their excuse was that a              
bear got the meat.                                                             
                                                                               
Number 2405                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE MASEK stated it seems that a lot of the problems are            
because of the air carriers that just drop off the hunters then                
take off again.                                                                
                                                                               
Number 2420                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. MORGAN stated the bill would sure help the problem.  He asked              
the committee members to put aside their differences.                          
                                                                               
Number 2429                                                                    
                                                                               
CO-CHAIRMAN OGAN stated we are trying to work together on this                 
problem and other problems.  Hopefully, this bill would be a step              
in the right direction to help.                                                
                                                                               
Number 2439                                                                    
                                                                               
NANCY HILLSTRAND testified via teleconference in Homer.  She is in             
support of HB 364.  The resources can't withstand what is going on             
in the woods right now.  There is a wanton waste problem.  She                 
agrees with the sponsor statement, and hopes that the bill is                  
passed.  It will help the moose population.                                    
                                                                               
Number 2493                                                                    
                                                                               
WAYNE REGELIN, Director, Division of Wildlife Conservation,                    
Department of Fish and Game, testified in Juneau.                              
                                                                               
TAPE 98-32, SIDE B                                                             
Number 0000                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. REGELIN continued.  One of the main reasons that people are                
proposing the bill is to solve the problem of wanton waste.  The               
department's opinion is that it will be very unlikely that the bill            
would have any noticeable impact on the wanton waste of moose meat.            
The problem of wanton waste is not specific to moose or                        
nonresidents.  There are a lot of cases that involved wanton waste             
with other species and resident hunters.  Each year about 30,000               
residents hunt moose and 3,000 nonresidents hunt moose in Alaska.              
Of the 3,000 nonresident hunters, 25 percent hire a guide.  If the             
bill passed and the number of nonresidents did not decline, only 7             
percent of the moose hunters would be impacted.  The small                     
percentage of 7 percent would not have any affect on the wanton                
waste issue.  The bill will have an impact on the state, however.              
In 1996, 2,947 nonresidents purchased moose tags and licenses that             
generated $1,429,000.  Last year, the number increased to 3,479                
generating $1,685,000.  The money goes into the fish and wildlife              
fund for wildlife management.  A nonresident hunting license costs             
$85, and a moose tag costs $400.  The average cost of a guided                 
moose hunt in Alaska is about $6,000.  The cost for 75 percent of              
the nonresident moose hunters will significantly increase by                   
thousands of dollars.  A large number will not come to Alaska                  
anymore.  Hunters will go to other places like Canada.  Based on               
the data when goats were added to the list of species that required            
a guide, there was a loss of 70 percent.  The department would                 
loose about $885,000 in revenue each year.  The loss of the hunters            
would also have a significant impact on the economy.  Based on a               
1994 study, nonresident hunters that did not hire a guide spent an             
average of $3,517 while in the state which included transportation,            
fuel, food and lodging.  In total, it factors about $5.5 million               
into the economy.                                                              
                                                                               
MR. REGELIN further stated another concern is the legal challenge              
for bear, goat and sheet nonresident hunters to have a guide.  The             
department has never been challenged, but based on the large number            
of federal lands there is concern.  He does not mean to give the               
impression that the department is not concerned about wanton waste.            
The waste of even one animal is too much.  There is nothing that               
hurts the image of hunting more than the waste of meat.  The                   
department follows up on any report of wanton waste, and issues                
citations, if warranted.  The fine for the waste of meat is one of             
the highest on the books for fish and game violations - up to                  
$5,000 a year and up to one year in jail.  The typical fine is over            
$1,000 and almost always involves some jail time and the loss of               
hunting privileges in Alaska for several years.  The department is             
trying other ideas to reduce or eliminate wanton waste.  The Board             
of Game passed the "meat-on-the-bone" in Units 17 and 19 in an                 
attempt to reduce wanton waste.  It is having some beneficial                  
effects.  In addition, the nonresident hunters in Unit 19B last                
year as an experiment were required to take an orientation course              
on how to handle meat and view film on how to determine whether a              
bull moose has 50-inch antlers or not.  If it is successful, the               
department will expand it into other areas where there are                     
problems.  The department is in the process of making a film on how            
to take care of meat in the field and working with the transport               
industry to deliver the course before flying the hunters out to the            
field.  The department is also trying to make it easier for people             
to donate their meat in the villages.  The passage of HB 364 does              
not really get at the problem of wanton waste.                                 
                                                                               
Number 0312                                                                    
                                                                               
CO-CHAIRMAN OGAN asked Mr. Regelin whether it is a huge problem                
with a significant portion of the moose regulations in terms of                
antler restrictions.  He has been a moose hunter for 20 years and              
has hunted with experienced guides, and they have argued about the             
legality of the animal that they are looking at in terms of its                
antlers (brow tines).                                                          
                                                                               
Number 0412                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. REGELIN replied about 50 percent of the state has antler                   
restrictions on a bull moose.  The most common is a spike fork or              
50 inches and bigger.  It was started about six years ago.  In some            
places it has worked really well, and in other places it has not               
worked well at all.  On the Kenai Peninsula most hunters have liked            
it.  In the Mat-Su Valley and Unit 13 it has not worked very well              
due to the antler configuration.  There is a task force of                     
biologists and the chairs of the advisory committees in the Mat-Su             
area working on the issue now.  The reasons for doing this were                
because in some areas the bull were being over harvested causing a             
distorted bull-cow ratio influencing the productivity of the herds.            
It was a way to allow for longer seasons in the field, take a                  
trophy bull, take a small-meat bull, and let the middle-aged moose             
grow and bread.  It has worked very well in restoring the bull-cow             
ratios, but in certain areas (Units 13 and 14) it is still a                   
problem.                                                                       
                                                                               
Number 0507                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE MASEK asked Mr. Regelin whether the state would be              
compensated for land-user fees that are not now collectible from               
drop-off hunts.                                                                
                                                                               
Number 0538                                                                    
                                                                               
CO-CHAIRMAN OGAN stated the guides currently have to go through the            
(DNR) Department of Natural Resources for land-use fees for camps.             
There would probably be an increase in the amount of those                     
activities.  He asked Mr. Regelin whether he has looked at the                 
difference.                                                                    
                                                                               
Number 0557                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. REGELIN replied he has not looked at that.  He knows that DNR              
has the ability to charge fees, but he is not sure whether it is.              
If it is, the fees are not going back to the fish and game fund.               
The vast majority of guiding is on federal lands - 60 percent.  He             
could try to figure out the amount that would go back into the                 
state treasury.                                                                
                                                                               
Number 0587                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE MASEK stated guided hunts would reduce the number of            
nonresidents harvesting moose in direct competition with local                 
hunters.  In addition, if the bill was to pass, hunting pressures              
would be spread throughout the state, not just in one area.  The               
guides could take them out to different areas.                                 
                                                                               
Number 0633                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. REGELIN stated it would certainly reduce the number of                     
nonresident moose hunters in Alaska.  There would be a loss of                 
1,800 nonresident moose hunters scattered throughout the state.                
There would be less competition, but in some areas such as Aniak               
almost all of the local residents hunt along the rivers by boats,              
while 85 percent that do not live in the area hunt by aircraft.                
Therefore, there is a natural method of reducing that type of                  
competition according to statistical information from Units 17 and             
19.                                                                            
                                                                               
Number 0718                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE MASEK stated she disagrees with Mr. Regelin in terms            
of wanton waste.  Right now, the problem is with unaccompanied                 
nonresidents that hunt moose.  The moose is so huge that it is hard            
to care and preserve the meat.  A guide could help them get the                
moose out and care for it.  Mr. Regelin's points are not really                
falling into place.  She finds it hard to believe some of his                  
facts.                                                                         
                                                                               
Number 0770                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE WILLIAMS agreed with Representative Masek.  It is               
difficult to hear his arguments when experienced people are also               
having the same problem.  He asked Mr. Regelin who is paying for               
the instructions and how much does it cost to produce a film.                  
                                                                               
Number 0815                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. REGELIN replied the department now provides written material to            
the transporters and guides, and a film on how to identify a 50-               
inch antler.  The department is preparing a film now that will cost            
about $15,000 on how to take care of moose meat.  The cost of the              
film on the 50-inch antler was probably in the $15,000 to $20,000              
range.  The department does the films itself so a lot of money is              
not spent.                                                                     
                                                                               
Number 0852                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE WILLIAMS stated his arguments are still very weak.              
He recognized that the amount to produce a film is a one-time cost.            
He supports the bill because it talks about nonresident hunters.               
                                                                               
Number 0888                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE BARNES stated when adopting the list of animals to              
require a guide legally was related to the type of terrain, for                
example.  She asked Mr. Regelin to speak to the legal reasons.  She            
could not remember them all.                                                   
                                                                               
Number 0922                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. REGELIN stated he is concerned about adding moose to the list.             
The list currently contains grizzly bears, sheep and goats.  The               
legislature has been extremely careful when adding species and to              
base it on the need of safety because it is a dangerous animal or              
very dangerous country.  The legislature has been afraid of a court            
successfully challenging it because there is so much federal lands             
in the state to the point that it would not be able to require a               
guide for any species.  If that was to happen, it would put a lot              
of guides out of business.  The primary guiding industry in Alaska             
revolves around bear and sheep.  It is a viable industry and                   
necessary for a lot of people to be able to hunt.  He reiterated 25            
percent of the nonresidents hire a guide to hunt moose.  A large               
part of the other portion comes to Alaska to hunt with friends or              
family.                                                                        
                                                                               
Number 1007                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE BARNES stated by-en-large the people who hunt with              
family members have to be closely related by blood for other wild              
species.  She asked Mr. Regelin whether the terrain for the moose              
habitat generally speaking are of a non-dangerous nature.                      
                                                                               
Number 1038                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. REGELIN replied, "Correct."  The state would be hard pressed to            
justify moose under the safety factor.  In terms of grizzly bears,             
sheep or goats, one can hunt with close family members up to a                 
second degree of kindred - dad, brother, uncle.                                
                                                                               
Number 1068                                                                    
                                                                               
CO-CHAIRMAN OGAN asked Mr. Regelin whether the conservation of the             
resource is a justifiable reason to require guided moose hunts                 
simply because of the difficulty in judging the antler                         
restrictions.                                                                  
                                                                               
Number 1113                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. REGELIN replied he is not sure what a court of law would say.              
The department realizes that there are problems with the 50-inch               
rule.  It is not just the nonresidents that have trouble.                      
                                                                               
Number 1133                                                                    
                                                                               
CO-CHAIRMAN OGAN stated it would be appropriate to hold the bill               
over until there are some answers to the legal questions.                      
                                                                               
Number 1146                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE BARNES stated it is not possible to say that one                
group of people leave meat un-salvaged any more than another group,            
otherwise there would be proof and they would be in jail.  There               
are very strict laws on the books that relate to salvaging meat.               
                                                                               
Number 1185                                                                    
                                                                               
CO-CHAIRMAN OGAN stated that is a point that the sponsor needs to              
address.                                                                       
                                                                               
Number 1199                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE WILLIAMS stated there is a lot of meat being left               
because of the 50-inch rack, yet there is no wanton waste.  He is              
hearing conflicting stories.                                                   
                                                                               
Number 1220                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. REGELIN explained he said earlier that even one moose or one               
caribou wasted is too many.  The department has no indication that             
wanton waste has increased.  The department also thinks that some              
of the measures it is taking to reduce waste will continue to be               
effective.  He believes there is a problem because in some villages            
that have had very little air traffic in the past such as Aniak are            
experiencing more traffic because of the Mulchatna herd.                       
                                                                               
Number 1320                                                                    
                                                                               
ROB HOLT, Representative, Alaska Professional Hunters Association,             
testified via teleconference in Mat-Su.  We are at this point for              
moose because of the elimination of the Big Game Commercial                    
Services Board.  It was the state's best way to control the growing            
commercial service industry centered around big game hunting.  It              
did a pretty good job of controlling the guides by putting them                
into a manageable scenario.  When the board's sunset expired they              
were looking at the air taxis and transporters.  The state lost the            
ability to control that group and now it is the fastest growing                
group.  There are 23 proposals that deal with this issue in one                
form or another of the Board of Game.  It is obvious that the                  
residents put a very high value on moose.  The moose deserve the               
same kind of consideration that bears, sheep and goats are under in            
terms of how the population is (indisc.--paper shuffling).  It is              
a sensitive issue because there are many different angles.  In                 
addition, the revenue shortfall for the Department of Fish and Game            
should be looked at.  He imaged that about one-half of the 1,800               
nonresident hunters would probably go ahead and book a guided moose            
hunt in the short run.  The number will probably not return, but it            
will not be significantly low.  There should be a way to transfer              
the revenue shortfall if it would be that much of an impact on fish            
and game.                                                                      
                                                                               
Number 1546                                                                    
                                                                               
CO-CHAIRMAN OGAN said the state has a lawsuit to control the                   
transporter group.  When he served on the Big Game Commercial                  
Services Board, it never tackled that group because it did not have            
the authority.  They were not providing a hunting service; they                
were simply taxi cab drivers.  They fell under the Interstate                  
Commerce Clause.                                                               
                                                                               
Number 1597                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. HOLT stated when the board was designed it went from a guide to            
a big game commercial services board strictly for the reason to                
encompass everybody who provided a service for a big game hunter.              
                                                                               
Number 1624                                                                    
                                                                               
CO-CHAIRMAN OGAN stated Mr. Holt is correct.  Licenses and stickers            
were issued to transporters.  He is not sure if they have gone                 
away, however.                                                                 
                                                                               
CO-CHAIRMAN OGAN asked Mr. Holt whether he favors or opposes the               
bill.                                                                          
                                                                               
Number 1658                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. HOLT replied he favors the bill in consideration of the people             
in the outlying areas that need some relief from what they see                 
happening.  Controlled use areas are not in the best interest of               
the average resident Alaskan who lives in an urban area and wants              
to go hunting.  He should not suffer for the over zealous drop-off             
industry.                                                                      
                                                                               
Number 1719                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE BARNES stated there is very strong case law that                
supports being able to force people to use guides for safety.                  
Incorporating moose into the same set of statutes is a foul of the             
United States Commerce Clause.  She asked Mr. Holt to comment.                 
                                                                               
Number 1765                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. HOLT replied, if the state was to keep close track from now of             
which nonresidents gets hurt hunting, moose hunters would be                   
included.  It is an area with the most possible safety problems                
with the least amount of supervision and responsibility.  It is                
just a guess, however, he could be wrong.  The requirement of a                
nonresident hunter to hire a guide for bear, sheep and goat based              
upon safety, the state is telling them that it is looking out for              
their best interest.  In the same law, the state has licensed a                
non-hunting housewife in Eagle River, for example, to be a guide               
for her nonresident relative.  It does not happen a lot, but he has            
seen it in Kodiak with brown bear hunting.  If the state is                    
concerned about the validity of its law, it needs to look at                   
requiring resident-relatives to provide an affidavit that says they            
have actually taken the species they are after with their                      
nonresident relatives.  Otherwise, what has the state done to                  
provide for the safety of that person.                                         
                                                                               
Number 1930                                                                    
                                                                               
CO-CHAIRMAN OGAN responded the state has transferred the safety                
over to the relative.                                                          
                                                                               
Number 1939                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. HOLT replied in that respect it also weakens the ability to                
retain the law.                                                                
                                                                               
Number 1965                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE BARNES stated that many legislators would not limit             
people from taking their relatives hunting and fishing.  If the                
state cannot show a justifiable reason for putting moose under the             
guide area, eventually all of the guided areas will be lost to the             
United States Commerce Clause.                                                 
                                                                               
Number 2001                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. HOLT responded her point is very well taken.  The state has                
always been very careful when approaching the issue for that exact             
reason.  But something needs to be done to relieve the problems in             
the outlying areas.                                                            
                                                                               
Number 2031                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE BARNES stated there is no question that the problem             
needs to be addressed, but there are other more legitimate ways to             
do it, such as seasons and bag limits.  If people are not getting              
their amount for sustenance in an area then there needs to be an               
earlier or later season so that they are not in competition for the            
same food source.                                                              
                                                                               
Number 2084                                                                    
                                                                               
CO-CHAIRMAN HUDSON stated he would like to see something from the              
Legislative Legal Counsel Division concerning the application of               
the United States Commerce Clause.                                             
                                                                               
CO-CHAIRMAN OGAN explained it has been requested already.                      
                                                                               
Number 2112                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE MASEK asked Mr. Regelin his opinion on the impact of            
wanton waste of moose meat in terms of the transporters when their             
unaccompanied nonresident clients are not being held responsible               
for the environmental impact.  The transporter industry is growing             
and making more money.                                                         
                                                                               
Number 2287                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. REGELIN replied, in general, overall there are a few big                   
transporters taking advantage of the system.  But most have been in            
business for a number of years.  If they see that not enough of                
their clients are brining meat out of the fields, they work with               
the Department of Fish and Game and the Division of Fish and                   
Wildlife Protection.  It is important to realize that a great deal             
of resident moose hunters fly in too.  They far out number the                 
amount of nonresidents.  The concerns of wanton waste can not be               
attributed to one group more than another group.                               
                                                                               
Number 2401                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE MASEK stated she does not feel comfortable with Mr.             
Regelin's answers.                                                             
                                                                               
CO-CHAIRMAN OGAN announced the bill will be held over, until there             
are answers from the Department of Public Safety - Division of Fish            
and Wildlife Protection and Department of Law.                                 

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