Gov. Scott Walker has approved a sweeping set of changes to
Wisconsin deer hunting that include doing away with in-person
registration. The Department of Natural
Resources' board approved the changes as part of an emergency rule last month.
The governor signed off on the rule Saturday at the annual National Rifle
Association and Wisconsin Firearms Owners, Ranges, Clubs, and Educators
convention in Weston. The DNR's new chief Warden Todd Schaller admits in person
registration has been a tradition in Wisconsin.. "It is a tradition, its something that has been a part of deer hunting and deer season for a long, long time,' Schaller told AM 1170 WFDL's Between the Lines program. The changes stem from a report Texas researcher James Kroll
prepared on the DNR's hunting policies. Walker's administration hired Kroll in
2011 to review the agency's strategies in response to hunter frustrations. The plan calls for eliminating in-person deer registration
stations, reducing the number of deer management zones, simplifying population
goals and creating county committees that will advise the DNR on local
population goals.
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