Munster, you stated:
"People need to understand that this is not an election where everybody gets to vote. They should also be aware that the sample that is used is not a randomly generated sample, it has an inherent bias built into it that favors those that are in favor of passing of antler restrictions. The DNR is aware of that fact, Brian Frawley acknowledged that there is an inherent bias in the sample due to the fact that members of the hunter sample are taken from individuals who have previously participated in the annual harvest survey."
For the life of me I can't see how the inherent bias Mr. Frawley acknowledges relates to your assertion [see underlined part of quote]
Percentages, shmercentages. Pick a number and move on, I say.
As to the surveys; ALL landowners owning, say, 40 or more acres should be allowed to participate, and they should be alloted one vote for each acre they own. You own 40 acres, you get 40 votes; 1,000 acres, 1,000 votes. THAT is what I would call representative decision-making, for it truly would weight stakeholder interest in the most equitable manner possible.
Munster, based on all the MDNRE survey material published over the years, antlerless tag purchase is totally not a factor or consideration in selecting the hunter sample. Consequently, your assumption [that the hunter sample has an inherent bias built into it that favors those that are in favor of passing of antler restrictions] falls apart.
On the other hand, considering the land fragmentation here in Michigan and the inclusion of landowners with as little as 5 acres, it's not much of a mental stretch to assume that the landowner sample would be overly represented by small parcel owners more inclined to disagree with management changes such a APR's.
Land ownership SHOULD NOT BE A FACTOR. It is a public resource, A landowner has no more vested interest than a apartment dweller or even a homeless person.
Purchase of a hunting license should be the ONLY QUALIFYING FACTOR.
Munster you're 100% wrong. Antlerless license purchase is absolutely not the determining factor in who is selected for the pool of potential participants in the APR hunter surveys. Please read and consider the following excerpt from the MICHIGAN DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES, Wildlife Division Report No. 3360, March 2002.
"The estimate of hunter support was also calculated using a simple random sampling design. A random sample of these hunters was obtained from lists of people that indicated they had hunted in Leelanau County during 1998-2000. These lists represented randomly selected people included in annual deer harvest surveys that were conducted by the Wildlife Division
(Frawley 1999, 2000, 2001)."
Similar wording is used regarding the hunter sample protocol for all the MDNRE APR survey reports to date.
Land ownership SHOULD NOT BE A FACTOR. It is a public resource, A landowner has no more vested interest than a apartment dweller or even a homeless person.
Purchase of a hunting license should be the ONLY QUALIFYING FACTOR.
I Can tell you don't live in a college town were people that have nothing vested can vote to raise property taxes.
Actually I live in a town where the residents approve an 18 mil tax on non- resident owners.:lol:
Tell a farmer or property owner that pays for emergency response vehicles, schools, 911
What do these things have to do with a free ranging PUBLIC resourse ?
and feeds the peoples deer,
Nobody asked them to feed the deer......In fact in the SLP it would probably help if they didnt. They can build a fence or buy tags/welcome hunters and kill the deer if its a problem.
they should have the same say as a homeless person sucking off the system and hunting state land and they will tell you go live in some communist country.
You can hunt public land, And you could sell or lease your property.....You are not tied to anythingLandownership should have some weight, a guy who lives in an apartment isn't shelling out money in property taxes on land,
Actually soggy legally a portion of the rent or fee's is their share of the taxes and they are allowed to use that portion on income taxes.
and if a guy is homeless, he has got alot more problems then worrying about APR's now doesn't he?
Not my call........Regardless of his current situation he should not lose his interest in A PUBLICALLY HELD RESOURCE
A landowner is tied to his land, a guy that lives in an apartment can go wherever the wind blows him, therefore, he has very little real 'vested' interest.
You can hunt public land, And you could sell or lease your property.....You are not tied to anything
and a public land hunter can save his money like the rest of us have and bought some land and can have a further say in the matter. They can buck up as well.
Excerpt from the MICHIGAN DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES, Wildlife Division Report No. 3360, March 2002.
"The estimate of hunter support was also calculated using a simple random sampling design. A random sample of these hunters was obtained from lists of people that indicated they had hunted in Leelanau County during 1998-2000. These lists represented randomly selected people included in annual deer harvest surveys that were conducted by the Wildlife Division
(Frawley 1999, 2000, 2001)."