CORNER BROOK — While hunters are not seeing a difference in the new big game licence priority pool system, there are questions as to why the regulations have changed.
Rod Wiseman has been hunting moose for 24 years. He had his moose licence this year and hunted successfully in Area 6.
“I don’t really see any difference in it as of getting a licence and not getting a licence,” Wiseman said. “I think it is kind of convenient for the government.”
Last year there were five pools in the big game priority pool system, this year there are nine. According to the 2010-2011 Hunting and Trapping Guide, the new priority pool number system reflects the pool status more clearly.
A hunter can now maintain his or her current priority pool status for up to three years without having to submit an application, and when a hunter reapplies for the draw within three years, his or her status will advance to the next priority pool without delay, based on the priority pool of his or her last application.
Wiseman said he understood the old system just fine and to make improvements did not really seem necessary. He said it was more confusing for him.
“They’re putting everybody in an individual classification,” he said. “Whether you’re partners, or you were an individual licence, if you had a licence the previous year ... there is probably certain areas that are not going to draw in certain pools.”
Wiseman believes Area 6, the Corner Brook-Stephenville hunting area, is not supposed to draw licences from Pool 4. He said he talked to many hunters and they said they get a licence in Pool 4 every year. He also said hunters in Area 5 usually receive their licences two years in a row.
Dave LeDrew, a retired high school teacher residing in Pasadena, has a licence this year and has been hunting in Goose Arm.
“(The new system) was to give fellows who were in Pool 1 for quite a while, a better chance of getting a licence,” LeDrew said.
He says that in order for hunters to really recognize a difference, it will have to be used for a year or two.
“The big difference is in Pool 1, that’s the big difference between the new and the old,” he said. “Hunters were stranded in Pool 1 for several years and in Pool 1 you should be able to pick and choose anything anywhere.”
He said he has never been higher than Pool 3 and he always fluctuated between Pools 3, 4 and 5. He also said he is undecided if the new pool system is more effective than the old priority pools.
Charlene Johnson, minister of Environment and Conservation, said the department changed the priority pools this year because hunters found the old system confusing.
She said the old system had letters, such as A, B, C and D, while this year the system uses numbers.
She also said with the new system hunters may keep their status for up to three years without having to reapply. She said if hunters do not apply within three years they will be bumped back to Pool 8.
“(We changed it) because when people were in Pool 1, we didn’t say on their application that they were in 1A, 1B, or 1C, it seemed like they were in Pool 1 for a very long time,” the minister said. “And then we would get a lot of calls, so am I in Pool 1A, or am I in Pool 1C ... they couldn’t remember how many years they were in Pool 1.”
Johnson said if hunters do not apply after three years the department will consider the hunters inactive and they will fall to Pools 8 or 9.
“In the beginning it was a little bit iffy, but it’s been nothing but positive ... it’s really the same. I know it sounds confusing,” she said.
There have been about 28,220 moose licences issued to hunters in the province this season. Of those 3,925 were for outfitters, and 24,295 were for residents
(The Western Star 11/22/10)
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