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IDAHO FISH AND GAME
HEADQUARTERS NEWS RELEASE Boise, ID
The Idaho Fish and Game Commission has directed the Idaho Department of
Fish and Game to further investigate a point system for controlled hunts in
Idaho. "It's a very popular concept right now." Wright said. "I think we're faced with the reality that there's a real demand out there." Such a system would award points to those who apply for controlled hunts,
but whose names are not drawn. In theory, a hunter's odds would increase
each time he/she was unsuccessful at drawing. However, Unsworth said such systems are of little value in hunts with the
least odds of drawing. In Idaho a substantial percentage of people applying for controlled hunts are putting in for those hunts with less than a ten percent chance of drawing, including 45 percent of deer applicants, 50 percent of antelope applicants, 53 percent of goat applicants, and 92 percent of sheep applicants. Of course, any time you increase one person's odds of success, you
decrease those of another. Some in the department are concerned that youth
hunters would suffer under such a plan since they would inherently have
fewer, if any points. Oregon's preference point system attempts to deal with
this potential dilemma by awarding 75 percent of tags to those with the most
points and drawing the remaining 25 percent from a pool of all applicants. "I can tell a hunter I'm not guaranteeing you a tag, but you are going to increase your odds of drawing. Your odds are better, but there's still no guarantee." Fish and Game staff will work to develop a proposal that will be presented to the Commission at a future meeting. If a preference point system is adopted it will not apply to the 2005 season.
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