05/01/2026
It’s been since 2005 for any meaningful increase in the cost of a Wisconsin fishing license. Send your representatives an email asking to approve the $2.9 million in emergency funding. Below is the email I sent my representatives
I am writing to urge you and your colleagues to approve the $2.9 million emergency funding request to maintain core fisheries operations.
There has not been a meaningful increase in the cost of a Wisconsin fishing license since 2005. Sportsmen and women are supportive of a fee increase to ensure adequate funding for stocking programs, wildlife initiatives, conservation law enforcement, and the administrative costs necessary to support these efforts.
Thank you for your time and consideration of this matter.
Sharing this appeal, as seen in Musky Insider...
70% Cut in WI Musky Stocking
Yep… you read that right.
The Wisconsin DNR is cutting musky stocking by roughly 70 percent this year, which works out to around 40,000 fewer fish going into the water. And it’s not just muskies either… hatcheries are already shuttin’ down, and key fisheries work is getting scaled back right as we roll into the heart of spring.
Not exactly what you want to hear heading into the season…
So what the heck happened here?
Here’s what’s going on right now
Back in late March, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources submitted a $2.9 million emergency funding request just to keep core fisheries operations running. That includes hatcheries, stocking, population monitoring, and habitat work. In other words, the behind-the-scenes work that keeps the whole deal running.
So why is that even needed?
Because the system funding all of this has quietly fallen behind.
A Wisconsin resident fishing license costs 20 bucks, and that price has not meaningfully changed since 2005. Meanwhile, costs for labor, fuel, equipment, hatchery operations, and infrastructure have all climbed.
That same 20 bucks just does not carry the weight it used to.
Where does that money actually go?
Fishing license revenue flows into the state’s Fish and Wildlife Account. That account supports fisheries work like stocking and surveys, but it also funds wildlife programs, conservation law enforcement, and administrative costs tied to those efforts.
So it’s not a straight line from your fishing license to more fish in the lake.
From an angler’s perspective, you’re paying to fish and now seeing stocking cut by 70 percent. Easy to see why people are scratching their heads.
There has also been chatter about license money being used for unrelated programs. The reality is those dollars are required to stay within conservation programs. They are not being pulled out for roads or random state spending. But they are shared across multiple priorities, not just fisheries, which is where the disconnect comes from.
Now layer in the current problem...
The state has already moved money to help cover a larger funding gap, and there are millions of dollars sitting there.
The issue is that the DNR cannot access or spend it yet. It still has to go through the legislative approval process before that money can be used. And while that process plays out, the calendar keeps moving.
This request is being handled under Wisconsin’s Section 13.10 process,
[https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/statutes/statutes/13/i/10] which allows state agencies to request permission to use funds that already exist in the budget. In this case, the money is there, but it cannot be used until it is approved by the Joint Committee on Finance.
So instead of waiting around, cuts are already happening. Musky stocking is being reduced by about 70 percent, hatcheries like Brule and Osceola have already shut down, and other fisheries work is being scaled back.
That is not trimming around the edges… that is a pretty good shot to the gut.
Timing could not be worse
All of this is happening during the spring stocking window, during the spawn, and right as opener is knocking on the door. Even if funding gets approved soon, some of this is already locked in for 2026.
You do not just rewind a stocking season.
The bigger picture
This did not pop up overnight. It’s what happens when revenue stays flat, costs keep climbing, funds are spread across multiple priorities, and the system cannot move fast when it needs to.
Bottom line: This is already happening.
Fewer fish going in. Less data coming out. Less support behind the scenes.
Not exactly the direction anyone wants to see things heading.
If you live in Wisconsin:
This is one of those times where speaking up actually matters. That $2.9 million funding request is still working its way through the legislature right now, and approval from the Joint Committee on Finance is what unlocks that money.
If you support funding for fisheries, hatcheries, and conservation work, now is the time to speak up.
You can find your state representatives here: [https://maps.legis.wisconsin.gov/ ]
Even a quick message supporting approval of this funding request can make a difference.
Because once a season like this slips by… you do not get a do-over.