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NJFishing.com Salt Water Fishing Use this board to post all general salt water fishing information. Please use the appropriate boards below for all other information. General information about sailing times, charter availability and open boats trips can be found and should be posted in the open boat forum. |
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#51
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The feds say it right in the explanation to get your portion of the excise tax spent on gear you buy . Every piece of fishing gear you buy you paid an 11% tax on . To get that money to come back to the state it’s required to show how many licensed salt water anglers there are . States like Florida get every penny thry are entitled to as well as left over funds from states like ours who get nothing . Free boat ramps , tons of money towards their reefs etc . In states like ours they would go to the municipal Ramos etc and pay the fees to operate it . That 2$ license pays back millions . In a state like NJ that has a general fund , having ear marked money that can’t go into that fund . But has to be used for salt water fishing improvements is HUGE . . .
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Captain Dan Bias Reelmusic IV Fifty pound + , Striped Bass live release club Last edited by hammer4reel; 05-04-2023 at 07:27 PM.. |
#52
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![]() A Florida resident annual saltwater license costs $17.00.
Almost every state I have been to requires a salt license and mostly have well marked and well maintained ramps, access to shore fishing, ample parking, restrooms and fish cleaning facilities. Florida fishing access and facilities are tops. If the license fee would make the above mentioned happen in NJ then no one would bitch about buying a license. $17.00 is less then lunch, gas and tolls for lots of people.
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We live in a time where intelligent people are silenced so that stupid people won’t be offended. |
#53
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![]() Okay I'll bite. If a saltwater license is popular in most coastal states, generates millions of dollars in revenue in license fees alone hopefully to be used for the benefit of better enforcement and improving saltwater fisheries in the state and it would generate millions in excise tax funds to New Jersey, why hasn't New Jersey adopted it?
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#54
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Gerry Zagorski <>< Founder/Owner of NJFishing.com since 1997 Proud Supporter of Heroes on the Water NJFishing@aol.com Obsession 28 Carolina Classic Sandy Hook Area |
#55
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Because NJ doesn’t care about you being able to hunt or fish here . They only chase money they can put into the general fund that they can spend as they wish . Our government here would spend millions to chase Pennie’s that they get to distribute . So when it comes to ear marked money they HAVE to spend for us only in saltwater improvements it falls on deaf ears . And instead of using their heads NJ fisherman right away don’t wanna give the state any more money . So instead pay ridiculous ramp fees each week , have no money coming back in for improvements . And just loose more every season . A salt water license would give you a louder voice in how things happen in our store effecting our fishery . .
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Captain Dan Bias Reelmusic IV Fifty pound + , Striped Bass live release club |
#56
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The tax for fishing is on specific fishing related purchases at 10%, not 11%, and motorboat gas purchases at 18.4 cents per gallon. 70% of the overall funds generated by the Act comes from the gas tax on motor boats and small engines which was included under the Wallop-Breaux Act. I believe the Wallop-Breaux Act also partly funds the ASMFC, MAMFC or both. All states have general funds, even Florida. When Dingell-Johnson was enacted, states were required to enact laws prohibiting the diversion of license fees paid by anglers for any purpose other than the administration of their state fishing agency which all 50 states agreed to. So New Jersey is no different than Florida or any other state in that respect. Difference is Florida and certain other states generate revenue from saltwater fishing licenses, New Jersey doesn't. But if they did, those funds are not earmarked exclusively for saltwater improvement, they're spent on a myriad of both freshwater and saltwater projects at the discretion of the state fisheries agency. Nowhere did I see that list include increased salt water enforcement or free ramp access. You can see the uses yourself in the attached link. In 2022, total funds paid out by Dingell-Johnson was $399 million. Every state gets something, so New Jersey did benefit to the tune of $3.99 million. The allocation formula is 60% based on number of licensed anglers (both salt and fresh water) and 40% based on geographic size. Every state gets 1% of the overall annual payout minimum and no more than 5% maximum. In 2022, twelve states got the 1% minimum of $3.99 million including NJ, Ct, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont meaning based on the allocation formula they didn't meet the minimum allocation but based on the law received the minimum regardless. Only two states got the 5% maximum, Alaska and Texas followed closely by California which got 4.67% of the $399 million payout. New Jersey in 2022 had 138,000 anglers in the Salt Water Registry, if there was a saltwater license in New Jersey and all 138,000 registrants bought a license which is highly unlikely, it appears New Jersey would still have received 1% of the pie which means a salt water license as far as excise tax apportionment is concerned would have zero impact. A salt water license would however obviously generate revenue, that revenue would not be allowed to go in the general fund (legally) but it would not at all be restricted to salt water improvements as mentioned. After reading this, the size and population of our state is impacting New Jersey not receiving a higher proportion of these excise taxes more than anything else, including a general fund which every state has or the lack of a salt water license. Pennsylvania, for example, which obviously doesn't have a salt water license, received 2.33% of the $399 million or $9.3 million dollars because of their population and number of fresh water licenses sold in the state. Everything anyone needs to know about how this works or is supposed to work is in the attached link. https://wildlifeforall.us/resources/...ry%20equipment. Halfway down the first page, click on Dingell-Johnson at a Glance and it walks through funding, how the money is spent with details about some of the programs funded. Thought this might help everyone better understand the process, didn't mean to detract from the striper slot topic. |
#57
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![]() NJ was the only state that voted against the emergency measure, which passed 15 to 1.
Think about this for a second - our state, knowing they had zero chance of stopping the measure, decided to vote no anyway, just so we can be on the record as the worst state for conservation measures year after year. I would say it's shameful but these people who purportedly represent "our interests" have no shame. |
#58
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It’s doesn’t get anything back on the number of saltwater fisherman because there is no license . Ramp access is one of the things returning funds are used for .if no available land is available they pay for the use of ramps that are available . . .
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Captain Dan Bias Reelmusic IV Fifty pound + , Striped Bass live release club |
#59
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Recruitment is the problem which is backed by the data in the last stock assessment. The biomass is there, it's just not producing in the Chesapeake. Scientists themselves blame it on pollution and the over harvest of menhaden in the Chesapeake Bay. The result, less forage and a polluted ecosystem. These new regulations don't address the problem, like fluke they impose a paper thin slot range that will only kill more bass. How many more hits does the recreational sector and small businesses that depend on it have to take before the regulators realize where the problem is? I think New Jersey's vote, as a practical matter, was more symbolic of the above as opposed to their beliefs when it comes to conservation. |
#60
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I agree based on what I've read that ramp access is something these funds are used for from the standpoint of upkeep and accessibility. Not really sure what you mean by "if no available land is available, they pay for the use of ramps that are available". |
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