You are aware that the Erie stamps funds are also to be use to purchase and improve access to Lake Erie and its tributaries.Those are not your fishing license dollars; they’re your boat registration dollars. Different fund.
You are aware that the Erie stamps funds are also to be use to purchase and improve access to Lake Erie and its tributaries.Those are not your fishing license dollars; they’re your boat registration dollars. Different fund.
I recall you previously mentioning that to someone making similar claims.Those are not your fishing license dollars; they’re your boat registration dollars. Different fund.
Keep in mind also that without the stocking program, expenses would be way less overall.Also keep in mind without the stocking program they would be selling way less licenses overall.
Would you agree with the generalization made about chub and sucker anglers earlier in the thread?As an active board member of Dauphin County League of Chubsmen, I can say with 100% certainty I target creek chub over stocked trout.
I do not support the trout stamp, and I do not support the stocking program as is and will gripe about it until it is fixed, however, I also don't support paying the fines and court costs and revocation for not following the law.
I wish PFBC would tighten the belt and get more efficient to reign in the spending instead of reaching out to congress to bail them out, but alas. I deal with the world I live in, not the one I dream of.
I don't want to become Tim Thomas 2.0.
Thank you for that insightful answer.Yes. Why is it required? Because they tell us we have to.
I didn't care how much it costs. I was just wondering why people have to buy a trout stamp if they only fish for wild trout. I only fish for what I believe are wild trout. I never buy a fishing license or a trout stamp.43 bucks for a license + trout stamp.
2x 15 packs of my favorite beer cost more than that.
Thats about a 3/4 tank of gas in my car (my car requires 91 octane)
Less than dinner for 2 at a decent restaurant.
Up until a few years ago, I had to buy a trout stamp to fish for crappies and perch because all the local lakes are also approved trout waters and stocked with trout.I didn't care how much it costs. I was just wondering why people have to buy a trout stamp if they only fish for wild trout. I only fish for what I believe are wild trout. I never buy a fishing license or a trout stamp.
How about a license?No trout stamp is required in New York.
50 bucks and good for an entire calendar year from the purchase date.How about a license?
And the PA non resident license with a trout stamp is $77.50 bucks and good for an entire calendar year from the purchase date.
Hold on to your hats for this next tidbit, you can fish not one, but two Great Lakes without the need for an additional stamp, plus Oneida Lake and Lake Champlain.
As a non resident it will cost you just around 2 bucks more than your PA license with the same privileges.
I would strongly support only stocking as many trout as can be covered by the cost of the trout stamp. Much like the approach taken by the PGC and pheasants.Most northeast states don't have a trout stamp (ME, MA, NY, NH, VT). I see the value in having a trout stamp to fund stocked trout, as some people in PA might prefer to warmwater fish only, etc but at the same time maybe it makes more sense to just have one license.
Maine recently announced increases on their fishing license fees, and the same argument about license fees going to stocked trout occur on their version of PAFF. The wild vs stocking, stocking over wild debate isn't unique to PA.
I would like to see more funds diverted to management of wild trout streams, easements for public access, etc. But at the same time, there's something to be said about equitable access to trout fishing for all people throughout the state via the stocking program. A lot of us, including myself, probably started learning how to trout fish on stocker streams.
I would strongly support only stocking as many trout as can be covered by the cost of the trout stamp. Much like the approach taken by the PGC and pheasants.
If we look at the number of trout stamps sold in 2024, accounting for annual, multi year and combo stamps, the PFBC sold 510,212 trout stamps at $13.00 each. Thats $6,632,756 or around half of the cost of the trout program in 2009, when trout stocking cost $12.4 million.
If we take those 2009 numbers and adjust for inflation, that 12.4 million dollar trout program cost would be projected at $18,484,026. That’s a huge chunk of the total license revenue and the all of trout stamp revenue.
Im sure better judgement would be used.The fishing regulations wording in many places is intentionally ambiguous for that very reason...
Just remember, the trout doesn't have to be harvested to be in violation of the trout stamp requirement. If you "take or possesses a trout" without having a trout stamp you are technically in violation...