Very fair in my opinion. I feel those paying license and tag fees should at a MINIMUM be given the factors they account in making their decisions. This is not a dictatorship. This is not the military. It is not a "do what you are told" situation.
Once again, I find this to be more than fair.
Here is something I have been stewing on since this thread has started. Technology? I find it very hard to believe with the tracking technology, infared technology, satellites, etc., which we have today, there is not a better method of collecting the data on the deer herd. How have they done it in the past? Grid off one square mile, count turds from deer, and work up the number of turds into some formula? Is this still the way it is being done? How is it being done? IS it being done at all? Before the people leading up the ODNR, and more specifically those determining zones and bag limits, determine how many deer permits per zone should be allowed, don't we have a right to know HOW they are determining this?
One of the most common methods of population estimation is studying the annual buck harvest. Season dates stay about the same, and the way people hunt doesn't change much... This, along with research to support it, suggests that the buck harvest trend is usually a good indicator of the population trend. This data, along with harvested buck age and antler data, is input with a bunch of other data into scientific models. Now here's an issue... Over the past 5 years or so, the way people pursue deer HAS changed. Hunters pass up a lot of small bucks that they would never pass up before... QDM has become very popular amond deer hunters. So, IMO, this change in hunting patterns could have an effect on the accuracy of these population models. The DOW I'm sure is already aware of such factors... But have they accounted for them??? I don't know. That's be a question for Tonk to answer.