Back at the beginning of my career with California Fish and Wildlife (1982), everything cost a lot less and our budgets were supported entirely by hunter and angler licenses and federal excise taxes on hunting and fishing equipment. Life was simpler then, but when I retired in 2015, not so much.
As most of you are aware, the hunting and angling portion of our population has been on a steady decline since the 1980's, a growing population impacting fish and wildlife, state mandates diverting funds and staff from programs that benefit the things we all love. The cost to raise a catchable trout or manage a state wildlife area has gone up exponentially. Throw in the impacts of climate change (drought, wildfires), the homeless crisis, illegal marijuana grows, evolving timber harvest regulations, unchecked development, inflation, and ten other things I'm not thinking of, all of this puts most state fish and wildlife agencies behind the 8 ball.