Missouri Whitetails - Your Missouri Hunting Resource banner

Missouri Department of Conservation proposes adjusting permit prices, and wants public input

1928 Views 77 Replies 32 Participants Last post by  Ryfarm48
Missouri Department of Conservation proposes adjusting permit prices, and wants public input

Missouri Department of Conservation Sign


The Missouri Department of Conservation is proposing adjusting prices for most hunting, fishing, trapping, and commercial permits to keep up with rising costs of goods and services it uses to manage its more than 1,000 conservation areas along with nature centers, shooting ranges, fish hatcheries, and other facilities.
MDC received initial approval on the proposed permit price adjustments from the Missouri Conservation Commission at the Commission’s May 19 open meeting at City Hall in Washington, Mo.
Missouri is home to more than 1 million anglers, 500,000 hunters, and several thousand trappers. MDC issues nearly 2.6 million hunting, fishing, and trapping permits each year. Most MDC permit prices have remained the same for the past 20 years while costs for goods and services have increased significantly since then.
“In early 2003, the price of a resident firearms deer permit was $17 and the cost of a gallon of unleaded gas was $1.42,” explained MDC Director Sara Parker Pauley. “Jump ahead two decades to May 2023 when the cost of a resident firearms deer permit is still $17 while the cost of a gallon of gas is about $3.30. That cost increase adds up considering MDC purchased nearly 908,000 gallons of gas in 2022 to run vehicles and equipment.”
Pauley added that, on average, most resident hunting and fishing permit prices would be adjusted by about $1.
“Compared to other states, Missouri permit prices are in the middle-to-lower end of the scale and would still be a bargain,” she said. “The average price of a resident firearm deer permit for surrounding states is $54 compared to Missouri’s proposed price of $18.
Additional revenue from permit sales will help MDC maintain and improve its nationally recognized programs and services for hunters, anglers, wildlife watchers, and others. Conservation efforts supported by revenue from permit sales include:​
  • Maintaining and improving nine fish hatcheries around the state that raise and stock more than 7 million fish annually for public fishing – including about 1.3 million trout at five hatcheries.
  • Maintaining and improving more than 70 public shooting ranges around the state.
  • Ongoing habitat work on nearly 1,000 conservation areas, including 15 intensively managed wetlands for public hunting and wildlife watching.
  • Expansion of popular youth offerings such as the Missouri Archery in the Schools Program, which has reached more than 200,000 young archers at nearly 700 Missouri schools, and the Discover Nature Schools Program, which helps more than 87,000 Missouri students each year at more than 700 schools around the state learn about and connect with Missouri outdoors.
  • Helping more than 24,000 landowners create and maintain habitat for wildlife.
  • Research on the health and sustainability of deer, turkey, quail, waterfowl, songbirds, fish, bears, elk, and other species.
  • Evaluation of the effectiveness of harvest regulations for fish and wildlife game species and understanding resource-user preferences.
  • Restoration, monitoring, and protection of imperiled and endangered species and habitats.
  • Removal of invasive species that threaten the health of native species and habitats.
  • Maintaining and improving 15 nature and interpretative centers around the state.
Pauley added that most Missourians are generally familiar with some of the work MDC does, but there are new challenges — with added costs.
“In addition to everything we offer and the work we are known for, we have new and expensive challenges,” she said. “Our staff are dealing with more and new invasive species and wildlife disease outbreaks. And the costs of many things we must buy regularly keep going up, from fuel to fish food.”
Some of the proposed permit price increases are:​
  • The price of a resident hunting and fishing permit would go from $19 to $20.50. The average price for surrounding states is $42.47.
  • The price of a resident fishing permit would go from $12 to $13. The average price for surrounding states is $23.
  • The price of a resident small game hunting permit would go from $10 to $10.50. The average price for surrounding states is $26.57.
  • The price of a resident trapping permit would go from$10 to $11. The average price for surrounding states is $29.38.
  • The price of a resident spring turkey permit would go from $17 to $18. The average price for surrounding states is $47.69
  • The price of a resident firearm deer permit would go from $17 to $18. The average price for surrounding states is $54.06.
  • The price of a resident antlerless deer permit would go from $7 to $7.50. The average price for surrounding states is $24.21.
  • The price of a youth resident antlerless deer permit would go from $7 to $7.50. The average price for surrounding states is $24.21.
  • Those under 16 and over 65 years of age will still get no-cost small-game hunting permits and no-cost fishing permits.
For more information on the proposed permit price adjustments, including a complete list of permits, current and proposed prices, average prices of similar permits for surrounding states, the last year the permit prices were raised, and other information, visit the MDC website at this link.
Permit sales account for about 17 percent of MDC’s annual revenue. Other significant revenue sources for MDC include the Conservation Sales Tax at about 62 percent and federal reimbursements at about 15 percent of total MDC revenue. Sales and rentals, interest, and other sources make up the remaining 6 percent of MDC revenue. MDC receives no funds through fines from tickets or citations, and no funding from the state’s general revenue funds. For more information, read the MDC Annual Review for Fiscal Year 2022 in the January 2023 issue of the Missouri Conservationist online at this link.
MDC will next seek public comments about its proposed permit price adjustments.​
See less See more
1 - 20 of 78 Posts
Let me get this straight...the rising cost of consumer goods is being used as the basis for an increase in fees? Would it be those same consumer goods that MDC is drawing a .08% sales on? Am i too simple minded to come to the conclusion that an increase in the price of consumer goods would also lead to an increase generated from the .08 cent sales tax?
  • Like
Reactions: 5
Let me get this straight...the rising cost of consumer goods is being used as the basis for an increase in fees? Would it be those same consumer goods that MDC is drawing a .08% sales on? Am i too simple minded to come to the conclusion that an increase in the price of consumer goods would also lead to an increase generated from the .08 cent sales tax?
exactly what I was thinking, but I am pretty simple as well! tack onto the NR ;)
  • Like
Reactions: 2
This is stupid, the easy solution is to increase NR permit prices by 200%. Sheesh, do I have to figure out everything for these clowns?????

:unsure:
  • Like
Reactions: 5
NR tags should double in price
  • Like
Reactions: 5
Let me get this straight...the rising cost of consumer goods is being used as the basis for an increase in fees? Would it be those same consumer goods that MDC is drawing a .08% sales on? Am i too simple minded to come to the conclusion that an increase in the price of consumer goods would also lead to an increase generated from the .08 cent sales tax?
I'm normally am not a huge basher of the MDC but I thought the EXACT same thing when I first read the news release.

Whomever put that piece together obviously wasn't very forward thinking.

Did the chick who was the head of Bud Light marketing go to work in public relations for the MDC? :D
  • Like
Reactions: 5
I would be okay with a modest increase of $1-3.00 but it they want to double it more to reflect the fuel example, while I would pay it, I would be completely against that!
  • Like
Reactions: 1
Hooks nailed it
  • Like
Reactions: 1
Hooks nailed it
definitely, but hunters should likely absorb a modest fee increase as well??? Don't agree?
I don’t care if they raise permits a dollar or three, but I don’t think the surrounding states they’re comparing to have anything similar to our sporting goods tax. So the funding model is different and the author and their sources failed to mention that.
  • Like
Reactions: 4
Can't have the nr's stop flocking to missouri
A $1 or $2 big deal but at least raise the NR tag some too.I know some of Missouri doesn't offer the Iowa,Illinois, and Kansas experience but some of it can be close.They want to hunt here they need to pony up too,I would expect it if I was hunting here from out of state.
  • Like
Reactions: 3
Raise prices on residents but not NR? I don't mind the increase but to solely raise the prices on residents and nothing to NR when they could easily charge 75-100 more and still be cheaper than surrounding states is absurd.
  • Like
Reactions: 5
2
I don’t care if they raise permits a dollar or three, but I don’t think the surrounding states they’re comparing to have anything similar to our sporting goods tax. So the funding model is different and the author and their sources failed to mention that.
Yeah, that's really a false comparison without providing all the info regarding funding....Hooks had it right.

They raised nr rates in 2020 by $40, from 225 to 265. They raised them in 2008 as well.
Here's the nr increases in 2020

Attachments

See less See more
  • Like
Reactions: 1
NR can use rifle for 12 days, how much more of an experience do they need? Two bucks for archery and 2 turkey for archery, how much more can get! Raise their tags or lower the game they can reap for the current price!
defund the mdc. most crooked entity in the state.
  • Haha
Reactions: 1
defund the mdc. most crooked entity in the state.
Likely not more crooked than most every public office in the city of STL
  • Like
Reactions: 2
If their going to compare to surrounding states then our non resident tags need to double.
  • Like
Reactions: 2
Just a thought....maybe no more free landowner tags? I'm a landowner but wouldn't object to doing away with it.:cool:
  • Like
  • Angry
Reactions: 4
1 - 20 of 78 Posts
Top