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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Montana sees hunting permit abuse

Commission considers changes to elk rules

Matt Volz Associated Press

HELENA – Montana wildlife regulators suspect more and more people are faking disabilities to take advantage of privileges granted to disabled hunters, so they want to remove one of those perks in hopes of curbing abuse.

Permits to hunt from a vehicle, called PTHVs, are given to Montana hunters with certain disabilities certified by a doctor, chiropractor, nurse or physician’s assistant. The permit allows a disabled person who can’t get around without assistance to hunt from a self-propelled or drawn vehicle.

In some prime hunting areas, those permit holders are allowed to drive along roadways normally gated and closed to all other vehicles. They are also allowed to shoot cow elk without buying an additional antlerless elk license, even in some areas where licenses aren’t available to the general public.

That kind of access has led to abuse of the permits by apparently healthy hunters, Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks officials said.

“Most of what we see is people utilizing the permit as an opportunity or a resource to be able to take an antlerless elk,” said James Kropp, the FWP’s chief of law enforcement. “They’re a long way from their vehicle dragging elk off the mountain unassisted, really in a situation the permit was not designed for.”

As of Monday, 9,188 lifetime PTHVs have been issued, according to FWP. The result has been a reduction in the number of cow elk in some areas, such as the Bitterroot Mountains in southwestern Montana, said FWP commission chairman Bob Ream.

“The population is being knocked back because of the substantial cow harvest in certain districts,” Ream said.

But even when they encounter instances of apparent abuse, it’s usually difficult for wildlife officials to penalize a person who holds a valid permit without putting them in the awkward position of deciding whether a person is disabled.

“Given the fact that these are signed off by a medical physician, it’s not really our judgment to determine whether they are or they aren’t,” Kropp said.

Ream and his fellow commissioners gave initial approval Friday to a plan that would ban holders of the special permit from shooting cow elk with just a general big-game permit.

The ban, which was originally proposed by a disabled hunters group called Blackfoot Access Group, aims to curb the problem by taking away one of the biggest incentives for abusing the program.

“You’ve got so many people who scam their way into getting a PTHV because of these incentives,” said George Hirschenberger, a retired Bureau of Land Management program manager who works with the Blackfoot Access Group. “We’re not asking for that privilege to go away, we’re asking the commission to suspend the privilege until the PTHV is back under control.”

Hirschenberger said he saw evidence of the abuse in the sheer number of people without apparent disabilities who would arrive at his BLM office and at other BLM and U.S. Forest Service offices seeking keys to open the gates of the roadways closed to all but the PTHV holders.

“If this guy can walk from his car to the front desk without a problem, what is the reason for him to have a PTHV?” Hirschenberger asked.