what are the economic influences that large wildlife mammal management activities have on local...
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Economic BenefitsWhat are the economic influences that large
wildlife mammal managementactivities have on local communities?
What is the economic value of LivestockEconomic Value – The dollar amount that the public is
willing to pay for a good or service rather than be without it.Willingness to pay
Based on wants and preferencesAssumes that preferences can be expressed in monetary terms
What are ways large mammal wildlife contribute to the economy of local communities and to the state of Minnesota?477,000 people hunt
in MinnesotaHunting generates
$417 million in salaries and wages
Yearly spending by hunters in Minnesota is $733 million
The average Minnesota Hunter spends $1,500 each year
AMERICA’S 13.7 MILLION HUNTERS COULD FILL EVERY NASCAR TRACK 5½ TIMES.
Hunters spent 38.3 Billion in 2011Hunters spending Amazon.com revenue
USFWS reported 13.7 million people (16 & over) went hunting in 2011 and spent $2,800 per hunter; which created 680,300 jobs and $11.8 billion generated in taxes
Hunters have providedSince 1937 -$7.2 to state conservation efforts
through excise tax on guns and ammunition $796 million on licenses each year$1.6 billion donated to conservation and
sportsman's organizations
States Ranked by number of resident hunters
What are the five funding sources that contribute dollars in Minnesota?
Reinvest in MinnesotaGame and Fish FundLotteryLegacy FundingWildlife Sports clubs/organizations
Reinvest in Minnesota (RIM)A Conservation
program that protects and restores the health of Minnesota’s natural resources
Started in 1986Compensates
landowners for placing a permanent easement on land
RIMSince 1986 over
$200 million in state funding has resulted in 5,500 permanent easements protecting 230,000 acres
Keeps private land in private ownership and on tax rolls
RIM Funding From
1.Clean Water Funds
2.Outdoor heritage Funds
3.Bonding by the State Legislature
4.Leveraged $90 million in Federal Funds
Administered by County SWCDs and NCRS
Funding impacts:Water Quality- Decrease erosion and sedimentationWildlife – Restore habitatRare Species & Habitat – protectsSoil – replants and protects drained farmland and
wellsFishing – prevents erosion from flowing into lakes
and streamsWetlands – pays owners to restore previous
previously drained wetlandsFlooding – reduces Contributes to job creation and local economies
Game and Fish FundLargest source of funding for Minnesota DNRThe revenue is primarily the product of
hunting and fishing license sales, federal reimbursements and a sales tax on state lottery tickets
Established in 1927 to ensure that hunting and fishing license fees would be used for conservation
Sources of Funding
Game and Fish Funds Uses
Minnesota now has 1,440 public wildlife areas with 1.29 million acres of habitat, from prairies and wetlands to forests and swamps, for Minnesota's wildlife species
MDHA partnering with Legacy Grant Program to establish this WMA
Development of Wildlife Management Areas
Game and Fish Funds UsesHunting and trapping
regulations and research
Promotion of wildlife habitat protection
Endangered species management
Non-game programScientific & Natural
areas protectionNatural heritage
program
Promotion of Wildlife Habitat
Minnesota Lottery FundingApproximately .07
cents of every dollar spent on the lottery goes to the environment Natural Resources Trust Fund.
Established by voter approval of a constitutional amendment in 1988
Legislative-Citizen Commission on Minnesota Resources (LCCMR)
The LCCMR is made up of 17 members: 5 Senators, 5 Representatives, 5 citizens appointed by the governor, 1 citizen appointed by the Senate, and 1 citizen appointed by the House.
The function of the LCCMR is to make funding recommendations to the legislature for special environment and natural resource projects,
Since 1963, over $735 million has been appropriated to more than 1,700 projects recommended to the legislature by the Commission to protect and enhance Minnesota's environment and natural resources.
2013 Environment and Natural Resources Trust Fund
AppropriationsThe LCCMR selected 46 proposals to be recommended to the 2013 MN Legislature to collectively receive $38.2 million in funding from the Environment and Natural Resources Trust Fund.
The Legislature adopted all 46 of these project recommendations and added one additional project. All 47 appropriations were signed into law by the Governor on 05/09/13.
Where do the LCMR Funds Go?
Minnesota Legacy Amendment
On Nov. 4, 2008, Minnesota voters approved a proposed Clean Water, Land and Legacy Amendment which added 3/8 of 1 % onto the Minnesota Sales Tax with the proceeds going to:
Amendment dollars
Funding through 2013
Constitutional Legacy Funding for clean water activities
The Legislature appropriated $179.43 million of Clean Water Funds for water activities during fiscal years 2012-2013
Example of a Legacy Funded ProjectMN Forests for the Future / Upper Mississippi ProjectThe Upper Mississippi
Forest Project is the largest conservation project ever undertaken by the state of Minnesota.
It protects more than 187,876 acres of Northwood's forests, wetlands and shoreline in the Grand Rapids area North-central Minnesota
Lessard-Sams Outdoor Heritage FundsCouncil makes recommendations to Legislature who finalizes the funded projects
Former Minnesota Senator Bob Lessard with Bud Grant promoting the Amendment
Funs to be used for the restoration, protection, and enhancement of wetlands, prairies, forests, and habitat for fish, game, and wildlife, and that prevent forest fragmentation, encourage forest consolidation, and expand restored native prairie
Lessards-Sams Heritage CouncilMinnesota Law specifies,
“The council shall use the regions of the state based upon the ecological regions and subregions developed by the Department of Natural Resources and establish objectives for each region and sub-region to achieve the purposes of the fund outlined in the state constitution”
Priority Actions for the Northern Forest Section
1. Protect shoreland and restore or enhance critical habitat on wild rice lakes, shallow lakes, cold water lakes, streams and rivers, and spawning areas.
2. Protect forest land though acquisition or easement, to prevent parcelization and fragmentation and to provide the ability to access and manage landlocked public properties.
3. Restore and enhance habitat on existing protected properties, with preference to habitatfor rare, endangered or threatened species identified by the Minnesota County Biological Survey.
4. Restore forest-based wildlife habitat that has experienced substantial decline in aerial extent in recent
decades.
Priority Actions for the Forest/Prairie Transition Section
1. Protect, enhance and restore wild rice wetlands, shallow lakes, wetland/grassland complexes, aspen parklands, and shoreland that provide critical habitat for game and non-game wildlife.
2. Protect, enhance and restore rare native remnant prairie.
3. Protect, enhance and restore migratory habitat for waterfowl and related species, so as to increase migratory and breeding success.
Priority Actions for the Metropolitan Urbanizing Area
1. Protect, enhance and restore remnant native prairie, Big Woods forests and oak savanna with an emphasis on areas with high biological diversity.
2. Protect habitat corridors, with emphasis on the Minnesota, Mississippi and St. Croix rivers (bluff to
floodplain.)3. Enhance and restore coldwater fisheries systems.4. Protect, enhance and restore riparian and littoral
habitats on lakes to benefit game and non-game fish species.
Priority Actions for the Southeast Forest Section
1. Protect forest habitat though acquisition in fee or easement, to prevent parcelization and fragmentation and
to provide the ability to access and manage landlocked public properties.
2. Protect, enhance and restore habitat for fish, game and non-game wildlife in rivers, cold water streams and
associated upland habitat.3. Protect, enhance and restore remnant goat prairies.4. Restore forest-based wildlife habitat that has
experienced substantial decline in aerial extent in recent decades.
Priority Actions for the Prairie Section 1. Protect, enhance, or restore existing wetland/upland
complexes, or convert agricultural lands to new wetland/upland habitat complexes.2. Protect, enhance and restore remnant native prairie, Big
Woods forests and oak savanna.3. Convert agricultural land to wetland/upland to protect,
enhance, or restore existing habitat complexes, such as existing WMA’s. 4. Restore or enhance habitat on public lands.5. Protect, restore and enhance shallow lakes.6. Protect expiring Conservations Reserve Program (CRP) lands. 7. Protect, enhance and restore migratory habitat for waterfowl
and related species, so as to increase migratory and breeding success.
Clean Water FundThose funds may only be
spent to protect, enhance, and restore water quality in lakes, rivers, and streams and to protect groundwater from degradation.
At least five percent of the clean water fund must be spent to protect drinking water sources.
Clean Water FundThose funds may only be
spent to protect, enhance, and restore water quality in lakes, rivers, and streams and to protect groundwater from degradation.
At least five percent of the clean water fund must be spent to protect drinking water sources.