An Oct. 3 announcement that the Land For Maine’s Future board had simply accredited a giant a part of the funding bundle for the acquisition of an historic 3,000-acre deer-wintering space in Southern Aroostook County is massive information.
The rising decline in deer yards, particularly within the North Woods, has contributed to the decrease deer survival numbers, particularly in Aroostook County. New laws this 12 months earmarked $40 million within the state biennial price range for the categorical goal of defending historic deer-wintering areas by outright buy and subsequent administration by the Maine Division of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife.
The funding for these deer-yard purchases comes from various sources, together with Land For Maine’s Future (LMF) funding. Among the cash comes from federal matching funds (Pittman-Robertson) and from new state revenues generated by hunters after they buy any-deer permits in Maine.
Maine Division of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife has recognized 7,500 acres of deer-wintering areas in Aroostook County for proposed buy. A half-dozen different deer yards in different elements of the state are being “negotiated.” Insofar as we will decide, there has but to be a stable “closing” on any of those deer-yard purchases.
Some media accounts of the LMF funding vote recommended that the land deal was a fait accompli — in different phrases, had already determined beforehand. This isn’t the case. Regardless of the general public victory laps by Fisheries and Wildlife Commissioner Judy Camuso and Gov. Janet Mills following the LMF vote, the three,000-acre Reed Deadwater tract received’t truly be owned by the state till value determinations are accomplished and title searches are full, and signatures are on the dotted line.
When the deal is de facto sealed, the Sportsman’s Alliance of Maine, which performed a pivotal function on this deer-yard safety laws, deserves to be standing alongside Gov. Mills and Commissioner Camuso after they take their bows.
If previous is prologue, actual property transactions might be tough. The act of shopping for deer-wintering areas from a keen vendor are not any totally different. As historic and hope-augering as all of that is for Maine and its deer populations, taxpayers, which incorporates hunters, nonetheless should be paying consideration and asking questions as soon as the yard purchases are remaining. Are we paying a good value per acre for these deer-wintering areas? And do these state land purchases take away taxable property from the tax base? Who makes up the distinction?
Curiously, Maine gubernatorial candidate Paul LePage acquired in a dust-up with the Sportsman’s Alliance of Maine over this very difficulty, the lack of state-purchased wildlands from the property tax rolls. LePage’s concern is justified. Sportsman’s Alliance govt director, David Trahan, concedes that the tax concern will not be frivolous. He advised LePage that the Alliance is ready to assist laws which may deal with these issues over misplaced tax revenues. Based on the Sportsman’s Alliance, lots of Maine’s conserved lands (4 out of each 5 acres) pay PILOTS (Funds in Lieu of Taxes).
On steadiness, these initiatives to guard deer-wintering areas have been inevitable if Maine is to be critical about being proactive stewards of its whitetail deer populations. The instruments of state-enforced code ordinances and voluntary cooperative agreements with landowners simply weren’t getting the job accomplished.
V. Paul Reynolds is editor of the Northwoods Sporting Journal, an writer, a Maine information and host of a weekly radio program, “Maine Outdoor,” heard at 7 p.m. Sundays on The Voice of Maine Information-Discuss Community. Contact him at [email protected]
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