02/23 -
UT - Nongame Wildlife Need Dollars Nongame Wildlife Need Dollars Salt Lake City -- If you care about songbirds, river otters and other nongame wildlife, the best time of year to help them is right now. Just write in the proper code on your 2004 Utah State Income Tax form and donate the amount you want to give to the Utah Nongame Wildlife Fund. The code for the fund is 01. The code and dollar amount you want to give may be written on any line between 23c - 23f on the tax form. Utah's nongame wildlife need the help. Nongame Wildlife Need Funding "Most Utahns don't realize it, but hunters and anglers provide almost all of the funding to manage wildlife in Utah," said Greg Sheehan, Administrative Services Section chief for the Division of Wildlife Resources. "They provide this funding when they purchase hunting and fishing licenses and pay special taxes on hunting and fishing equipment. Because most of the money we receive comes from sportsmen, it's used almost entirely to benefit wildlife that people can hunt or fish for." Sheehan says the money received through the nongame tax checkoff is used entirely to help wildlife for which people don't hunt or fish.
How Nongame Wildlife Money is Used Last year, Utah taxpayers gave $57,758 to the Utah Nongame Wildlife Fund. The funds were used to support several important programs that benefit nongame wildlife. The DWR's nongame avian program uses the money to fund surveys of raptor and songbird populations in Utah. The management decisions biologists make through the information they obtain helps ensure birds as common as yellow warblers and American robins, and as rare as peregrine falcons and yellow-billed cuckoos, will thrive for years to come. Biologists in the DWR's nongame mammals program use these contributions to help endangered and sensitive species. Through their work, river otters now live in southern Utah, a black-footed ferret population is being established in the northeastern part of the state and important information is being gathered about pygmy rabbits and prairie dogs. "We appreciate every dollar we receive from Utah taxpayers," said Kevin Bunnell, mammals coordinator for the DWR. "The more funding we receive, the more we can do to help these animals." If You've Already Filed Your Taxes If you've already filed your taxes, there's still a way to help. The DWR accepts donations for nongame wildlife throughout the year.
"We encourage everyone who wants to help Utah's nongame wildlife to donate," Sheehan said. "It's a great way to get a good feeling during tax time or anytime during the year." | ||
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