At first blush, this sounds like a well-intentioned move that could open doors for people who couldn't otherwise afford to give up the time (someone like a fishing or hunting guide, for example). The trouble, as with most efforts to change the makeup of the commission, comes down to the fact it is the governor, and only the governor, who can appoint commissioners. Until governors stop using commission appointments as opportunities to advance their political agendas (you can guess when that will happen, because it won't), commission appointments will forever be for the sake of political advantage; not for the sake of fair, equitable representation.
Unless they change the way commissioners get appointed to some sort of public process, this will effectively turn commissioners into paid lobbyists, which I can't imagine will do much to serve the interests of any stakeholders who are currently under-represented. Indeed, I think this is a step in the wrong direction. I'd be all for it if the commissioners weren't political appointees, but such as it is....