Kim Dean and her husband raised their three children to love hunting on their home turf in the Newcastle area.Ā
But as the children grew to adulthood, one moved away to Minnesota and another to South Dakota.Ā
Coming back home to hunt has proven frustrating for them, Dean told Cowboy State Daily.Ā
Nonresident hunting tags in Wyoming can be difficult to draw and are considerably more expensive than resident tags.Ā
For example,Ā a full-price nonresident elk tag costs $672 in the regular draw, while a resident full-price elk tag costs $57.Ā
Dean got to thinking whether anything could be done to help people who grew up in Wyoming, and hope to return to hunt with their families.
When she found out about Montanaās āCome Home to Huntā and ānonresident nativeā hunting tag programs, she wondered if a similar program could work in Wyoming.Ā
Those programs offer hunting tags to people born in Montana, but who moved away, at prices that arenāt as cheap as resident tags, but still much less pricy than regular nonresident tags.Ā
Montana created āa space in the middleā for native nonresident hunters, Dean said, and sheād like to see Wyoming do likewise.Ā
2026 Legislative Bill In The Works?
She reached out to legislators, including J.D.s Williams, R-Lusk. Williams brought the idea before the LegislatureāsĀ Travel, Recreation, Wildlife and Cultural Resources Committee on Friday.Ā
Williams, who doesnāt sit on that committee, told Cowboy State Daily that he might sponsor a bill calling for Wyoming nonresident native hunting tags.Ā
However, heād rather the bill be sponsored by Travel and Tourism. Committee-sponsored bills typically move faster and have better chances of passing that individually-sponsored bills, he said.Ā
Williams said that judging by the reactions heās gotten so far, such a bill might have good odds of going before the 2026 legislative session.Ā
Dean said sheās spoken with other legislators and Wyomingites and has gotten favorable reviews.Ā
āI think it would benefit Wyoming to bring these kids back here to hunt,ā she said.Ā
How Montanaās Programs Work
Williams said that Montanaās Come Home to Hunt and native nonresident hunting tag can serve as a basic template, but Wyoming doesnāt need to replicate what another state has already done.
The Wyoming Game and Fish Department has the expertise to help lawmakers draft a bill that will work best for Wyoming, he said.Ā
Montanaās Come Home to Hunt Program is for nonresidents who used to live in Montana, regardless of whether they were born there.Ā
To qualify, they must be sponsored by a resident Montana hunter who is a relative.Ā
That native nonresident hunting tag program is open only to people who were born in Montana.Ā
The programs offer qualifying hunters enticing discounts on tag prices. For example, a regular Montana general nonresident elk combination license costs $1,078.Ā
The Come Home to Hunt and native nonresident elk combo licenses are $539.Ā
āWyoming Exports 70% Of Its Youthā
Wyoming is a great place to grow up hunting, Williams said. But many young adults move away, frequently for job opportunities.Ā
āWyoming exports 70% of its youth,ā he said.Ā
With many of the stateās elk herds well above the Game and Fishās objective numbers, bringing former residents back to Wyoming for elk hunting would be a great idea, he said.Ā
āMost people Iāve talked with out-of-state children say their children want to come back to hunt elk. Anytime we can encourage elk harvest, I think thatās a good thing,ā he said.Ā
Dean said she and her husband long to share hunts with their out-of-state adult children, and their children.
āIām hoping that the time is rightā for a bill that would make it easier for native nonresidents to come back and hunt in Wyoming, she said.Ā
āAnd this isnāt just for us. Iāve got to believe that there are other families like ours, who want to see their children and grandchildren come back to hunt,ā Dean added.
Ā
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.





