Colorado Politics

Big game hunting the subject of Sen. Ray Scott’s Tuesday bill

A bill setting up a raffle for hunting licenses for Colorado big game is scheduled for Tuesday in the state Senate, but it has conservation and animal rights groups lining up to oppose it.

Senate Bill 137 would direct the state Parks and Wildlife department to set up a raffle for hunting licenses for 10 species in Colorado: Shiras moose, Rocky Mountain elk, mule deer, white-tailed deer, Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep, desert bighorn sheep, Rocky Mountain goats, Pronghorn antelope, black bears and mountain lions. Republican Sen. Ray Scott of Grand Junction is the measure’s sponsor.

The raffle tickets are $50 each and a person can buy up to 25 tickets; each ticket enters the purchaser into a raffle for each species hunting license.

The bill dictates that the money from the raffle will go to administer the drawing. Half of the money from the raffle would go to wildlife habitat conservation or restoration, recruitment of new hunters or  protecting the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation. The model has seven basic principles, including that “individuals may legally kill certain wild animals under strict guidelines for food and fur, self-defense and property protection.  Laws restrict against the casual killing of wildlife merely for antlers, horns or feathers.”

Animal rights groups are already labeling the bill as permission to trophy hunt.

Colorado Voters for Animals and Conservation Colorado are both opposed, as is Maxine Mager of Creative Acres, a no-kill animal sanctuary in Brighton. She told Colorado Politics that the idea sends a bad message about Colorado “and it’s narrow thinking, if the goal is to raise money for wildlife programs. I think you’d make more money, if that’s really the goal, if you open it up to more people and not just hunters,” she said.

Mager plans to testify at Tuesday’s hearing and will suggest other things that could be raffled off instead of killing animals. She wouldn’t say what those other things might be, but added that conservationists, hunters and animal-rights advocates could agree on them.

Mager called the bill “a symbol we’re sending” about killing iconic animals. “It’s about how we want Colorado to be represented.”

Scott is expected to offer amendments to the bill when it goes through the Senate Finance Committee Tuesday, although how those amendments will change the bill is unknown.

The bill’s fiscal analysis points out that the raffle is expected to bring in about $$277,635, but the analysis also said the bill will cost the state slightly more than that to administer the raffle and the other programs tied to it.

 
HOGP

PREV

PREVIOUS

Stalemate over transportation solution continues at Colorado Capitol

Just how much Colorado’s General Assembly should put toward funding the $9 billion wish-list for transportation projects across the state is still unresolved between the House and Senate. A series of ballot proposals, unveiled last week by a coalition – Move Colorado, led by the Metro Denver Chamber of Commerce – would ask voters to increase the […]

NEXT

NEXT UP

Colorado Springs council members rip Bill Murray for walkout

Several Colorado Springs City Council members chided one of their own Monday, accusing Councilman Bill Murray of grandstanding and turning negotiations on Banning Lewis Ranch into a media sensation. Murray walked out of an executive session last week, saying he will boycott closed sessions on the ranch’s 30-year-old annexation agreement, which long has been blamed […]


Welcome Back.

Streak: 9 days i

Stories you've missed since your last login:

Stories you've saved for later:

Recommended stories based on your interests:

Edit my interests