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Big Game Migration Conservation Momentum Continues to Build in Idaho

Idaho Transportation Department begins construction of new underpasses to increase traffic safety while helping conserve a crucial mule deer migration.

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May 22, 2025

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May 16, 2025

TRCP Applauds Two Montana Conservation Funding Bills

House Bills 855 and 932 are wins for habitat and Montana wildlife crossing infrastructure

The Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership joins Montana’s motorists, hunters, anglers, and conservationists in celebrating two major wins for wildlife movement, habitat conservation, and public safety following Governor Greg Gianforte’s signing of House Bills 855 and 932. These two critical pieces of legislation will reduce wildlife-vehicle collisions and conserve and restore habitat across the state.

“With Governor Gianforte’s signature, Montana is committing to a strong future for big game habitat and increased public safety on our roadways,” said Ryan Chapin, Montana field manager for the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership. “We thank Governor Gianforte for signing these important pieces of legislation and for supporting the iconic big game animals that define our state.”

House Bill 855, sponsored by Representative Katie Zolnikov (R-Billings), establishes the Fish, Wildlife & Parks Wildlife Highway Crossings and Accommodations Account, a dedicated account to help facilitate the construction and planning of wildlife overpasses, underpasses, and fencing. The bill introduces a new specialty license plate that will generate funds and help promote the importance of wildlife movement. The account will accept dedicated wildlife crossing funding from multiple sources, such as the newly created Habitat Legacy Account in House Bill 932.  

House Bill 932, sponsored by Representative Ken Walsh (R-Twin Bridges), further strengthens Montana’s conservation funding by creating the Habitat Legacy Account, which will be funded through a portion of conservation-dedicated marijuana tax revenue. This account will provide a stream of funding for habitat conservation, wildlife improvement projects, and wildlife crossings—ensuring long-term support for Montana’s big game and migratory species.

“These bills reflect the values of Montanans who care deeply about wildlife habitat, road safety, and our outdoor traditions,” said Ty Stubblefield, Executive Director of the Montana Wild Sheep Foundation. “We thank Governor Gianforte, Representatives Walsh and Zolnikov, and the Legislature for recognizing the importance of these investments.”

Montana has one of the highest rates of wildlife-vehicle collisions in the West, posing risks to both motorists and wildlife. Infrastructure like wildlife crossings has proven effective in other states, reducing collisions while maintaining critical migration routes for elk, deer, pronghorn, moose, and other species.

TRCP looks forward to working with state agencies and partners to implement these new programs that ensure Montana remains a leader in wildlife conservation.

Learn more about TRCP’s commitment to wildlife migration conservation HERE.

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What Hunters and Anglers Need to Know About Budget Reconciliation

An overview of the budget reconciliation process and its implications for public lands, access, and conservation.

Last week, the House Committee on Natural Resources (HNRC) approved its portion of an emerging budget reconciliation package. For months, Congressional Republicans have been developing the package to implement the party’s domestic policy agenda, with an emphasis on cutting government spending and generating additional revenue to reauthorize and extend the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, along with defense and immigration related spending. 

According to HNRC Chair Bruce Westerman (R-Ark.), the natural resources portion of the budget reconciliation package will generate an estimated $18.5 billion in revenue and savings by mandating increased oil, gas, coal, and leases on public lands; reducing environmental regulations; and including a last-minute amendment to sell hundreds of thousands of acres of public lands in Utah and Nevada.  

The TRCP has been tracking budget reconciliation legislation and remains committed to helping hunters and anglers understand and engage in the process to maintain fish and wildlife habitat, public access and public commenting opportunities.  

Here’s what you need to know about the package, how it is developing as it moves through Congress, and how it will impact hunting and fishing across the country. 

In 1974, Congress passed the Congressional Budget Act. This Act conveys the authority to set and enforce spending and revenue blueprints through a process called budget reconciliation. Under this process, Congress adopts a concurrent resolution that instructs House and Senate committees to meet assigned budget targets. Committees then develop legislation according to these directives, and the legislation from each committee is combined into a “budget reconciliation bill.” 

In statute, budget reconciliation bills are restricted by the Byrd Rule, which prevents the inclusion of policy provisions that don’t change the level of spending or revenues, or that only create “merely incidental” changes to spending or revenues. The rule also prevents provisions that increase deficits beyond the “reconciliation window,” which typically lasts ten years.  

Despite these restrictions, reconciliation bills are often looked at as potential vehicles to advance politically controversial provisions because this type of legislation carries special status in the Senate. Whereas most legislation requires 60 votes in the Senate to avoid a filibuster, budget reconciliation bills are considered under expedited procedures and allow passage with only a simple majority of 51. As a result, the reconciliation process has been used as the vehicle for several landmark packages when one party controls both chambers of Congress and the White House, such as President Trump’s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act and President Biden’s American Rescue Plan Act and Inflation Reduction Act. 

The House and Senate passed a concurrent budget resolution on April 10, establishing spending and revenue targets for each committee. Because the reconciliation package includes tax provisions, the House is responsible for initiating legislation, which has begun to emerge from the committee process. The Committee on Natural Resources is the eighth committee to mark up and approve its reconciliation legislation.  

Earlier today, each committee’s recommendations were set to be approved by the House Budget Committee. However, the reconciliation text was ultimately rejected on a 16-21 vote over objections from the several Republican members. They opposed the current version of the bill due to their concerns that the bill does not cut spending far enough. The Budget Committee will work through the weekend to resolve these issues and will likely look to vote again early next week. If approved by the Budget Committee, the bill will then be sent to the House floor following another potential set of amendments in the House Rules Committee, where it can be passed with a simple majority. 

Committees in the Senate may opt to create their own versions that differ from the House, although the Senate is allowed to pass the House version without doing so. Once the Senate version reaches the floor for consideration, senators can use a point of order to reject provisions which they believe violate the Byrd Rule. The Senate Parliamentarian, a nonpartisan officer, will rule on whether each questioned provision is in violation of the rule, a ruling that can be waived with a sixty-vote majority. Republicans currently have 53 senators, meaning that provisions likely must remain within the boundaries of the Byrd Rule to pass. After this process concludes, the full Senate version can pass with only a simple majority. 

After both bodies pass reconciliation legislation, the Senate and House must align their bills, either through a joint conference committee or through the exchange of amendments. The compromise version must again pass both the House and Senate before being signed by the President. House Republicans aim to complete this process by Memorial Day, but some Senate Republicans note that negotiations could take longer. 

Republicans are currently planning to address the debt limit through the budget reconciliation process. The Treasury Department recently announced that the “X Date” (the date by when the U.S. Government would default on its debt) will likely come some time in August. This means that Congress must act before then to increase or suspend the debt limit, placing a definitive deadline for reconciliation bills for as long as they remain linked with the debt limit.  

Public Land Sales in NV and UT 

An amendment successfully added to the bill would authorize the sale of roughly 460,000 acres of federal public land across Nevada and Utah. Given the nature of the amendment text, it is difficult to analyze exactly how many acres would be for sale. However, in Nevada, it’s estimated that the amendment would order the sale of 65,000 acres in Clark County, 16,000 acres in Washoe County, 12,000 acres in Lyon County, and 350,000 acres in Pershing County (including land exchanges); in addition to 11,000 acres across almost 70 parcels in Utah. Proponents of the amendment argue that the measure will generate revenue and facilitate housing and local infrastructure development.  

Following months of advocacy from hunters, anglers, and outdoor recreationists, the HNRC-released text originally omitted any provisions related to public land sales. The amendment was introduced late in the markup following more than 12 hours of debate. In addition to forcing land sales, the amendment also skirts the usual process of public input into any proposed land sales and fails to direct revenues from Bureau of Land Management land sales for the purchase of public access or habitat—the amendment would instead send revenues directly to the general treasury for other purposes.  

The TRCP agrees that there is room for discussion around how to facilitate small, purposeful exchanges and disposals that may facilitate affordable housing or other uses that are in the public interest and supported by impacted, local interests. We are willing to work in good faith to address challenges that communities adjacent to federal lands may face. But our stance on this approach is clear: it is the wrong approach to force this sale through a partisan budget reconciliation process in Congress that eliminates opportunities for public engagement and in a fashion that would NOT deposit any revenues from land sales back into conservation and access (as would be done through a different process).  

“There are well-established criteria and processes for disposing of public lands, and reconciliation legislation is not the proper venue for such decisions,” said Joel Pedersen, president and CEO of the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership. “Any proposed sale of public lands must involve a transparent public process, all transactions should serve the public interest, and proceeds should be reinvested in new public land access and habitat conservation.” 

Boundary Waters Conservation 

A provision of the Committee-approved bill would reinstate leases for Twin Metals Minnesota, a subsidiary of the Chilean corporation, Antofagasta PLC, to conduct copper-nickel sulfide mining activities directly upstream form the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness in Superior National Forest, threatening fish, wildlife, and water quality in the country’s most visited wilderness area. 

Each year, thousands of hunters and anglers visit the Boundary Waters, which contains over 2,000 pristine, interconnected lakes and supports large populations of loons, moose, walleye, trout, deer, ruffed grouse, fishers, beavers, sturgeons, and more. However, these species, this ecosystem, and the local economy are put at risk by sulfide mining drainage that increases acidity and leaches toxic metals in the watershed, endangering water quality and aquatic life.   

The TRCP is a partner organization of Sportsmen for the Boundary Waters, which opposes the Twin Metals mine.

Ambler Road Development 

The bill would require the Department of the Interior to issue permits, licenses, leases, and certificates to allow the construction of the Ambler Industrial Road. This road cuts directly across Alaska’s Brooks Range, which covers our nation’s most wild and remote hunting and fishing grounds. The fish and wildlife resources in this vast region – including one of the largest remaining caribou herds in North America and world-renowned sheefish fisheries – support 66 rural communities as well as a collective of guides, outfitters, transporters, air taxi services, and other small businesses.  

The proposed 211-mile Ambler Industrial Road would require nearly 3,000 stream crossings and span 11 major rivers, threatening fisheries, subsistence resources, and the region’s outdoor economy. The bill establishes a fixed annual rental fee of $500,000 for the road’s right-of-way from fiscal years 2025 through 2034.  

Further, the Ambler industrial mining road would not strengthen U.S. supply chains of critical minerals, but it could strengthen the supply chains of our adversaries.The road would facilitate the sale of Alaska’s mineral resources to foreign processors largely in southeast Asia and China. The TRCP is a member of the Hunters & Anglers for the Brooks Range, a coalition of over 14,000 individuals and 65 groups and brands, that opposes the Ambler Industrial Road.   

Rolling Back BLM Resource Management Plans 

If the House bill were to become law, policy language included would prohibit the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) from implementing, administering, or enforcing the following Records of Decision and Approved Resource Management Plans (RMPs): 

  • Rock Springs Field Office, Wyoming 
  • Buffalo Field Office, Wyoming 
  • Miles City Field Office, Montana 
  • North Dakota 
  • Colorado River Valley Field Office and Grand Junction Field Office 

These plans are the product of extensive public engagement, and in some cases, state and locally driven negotiations among the variety of interests that are supported by multiple-use BLM lands. They also in some cases are updating management plans that are decades old. Hunters and anglers did not get everything that we wanted in these plans, nor did other interests at the table. If members of Congress have concerns about the content of these plans, the Bureau of Land Management has many administrative tools available to improve implementation of completed land use plans and has the discretion to surgically amend or revise those plans, which is preferrable to sweeping legislative action.   

Mandating Lease Sales for Oil, Gas, Mineral, and Coal on Public Lands 

Multiple provisions would mandate lease sales for oil, gas, mineral, and coal extraction on public lands. These include at least four lease sales in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge; quarterly onshore oil and gas lease sales in Wyoming, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, Montana, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Nevada, and Alaska; at least 30 offshore lease sales in the Gulf; at least six lease sales in Cook Inlet, Alaska; and lease sales every other year in the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska. 

Additionally, the legislation mandates that the Department of the Interior make available at least 4,000,000 acres of federal public lands for leases on known coal reserves. It also lowers the royalty rates paid to the government by developers for oil and gas extraction, which some argue will spur new lease sales and thereby increased revenue. The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 increased the minimum royalty rate from 12.5% to 16.67%, so this action would undo that increase. Even at the higher rate, oil and gas royalties for production on federal land are still much lower than on most non-federal lands, such as private lands and state trust lands.   

National Environmental Policy Act Process Changes 

Certain permitting reform provisions were also included. The bill would add an opt-in fee for project sponsors seeking federal NEPA review, including for oil, gas, coal, and mineral projects pursuing permits on federal lands. The fee would allow sponsors to pay 125% of anticipated costs of the environmental review, limiting environmental assessments to six months and environmental impact statements to one year. The fee would also make review assessments and statements exempt from administrative or judicial review, preventing advocates from challenging key elements of permitting decisions in court.  

Proponents have claimed that the provision would streamline the permit process and generate $1 billion in additional revenue, while critics have described the provision as a pay-for-play scheme, limiting the ability of the public to challenge projects that may have outsized, but under-reviewed environmental impacts. 

Several of the provisions above include substantive policy proposals with seemingly “merely incidental” budgetary impacts, meaning that they could be outside the bounds of what is allowed by the Byrd Rule. It is possible, if not likely, that much of what passed the House Natural Resources committee will be heavily scrutinized on the Senate side to meet the 51-vote threshold. The TRCP is closely monitoring these bills and will ensure that hunters and anglers have a seat at the table to speak up for conservation and access. 

In the face of gridlock, conservation is, and should be, a shared priority regardless of party affiliation or ideology. TRCP is your resource for all things conservation. In our weekly Roosevelt Report, you’ll receive the latest news on budget reconciliation as well as emerging habitat threats, legislation and proposals on the move, public land access solutions we’re spearheading, and opportunities for hunters and anglers to take action. Sign up now


Hunters and anglers have always been the unsung heroes of conservation in America, quietly paying it forward every time we buy a license, a box of ammo, or a tank of boat fuel. We know you’re not satisfied with simply going hunting or fishing and then going home—so go the extra distance. You can take action on the conservation issues that matter right now. Click here to get started.

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May 14, 2025

TRCP Celebrates House Introduction of MAPOceans Act

New legislation will increase accessibility to saltwater recreational fishing regulations and marine waters navigation information

The Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership cheers House introduction of the Modernizing Access to Our Public Oceans Act by Representatives Russell Fry (R-S.C.) and Mike Levin (D-Calif.).

The MAPOceans Act will direct the standardization, consolidation, and digitization of boating and recreational fishing information for federally managed marine waters and federal fisheries administered by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The MAPOceans Act was introduced in the Senate earlier this year by Senators Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Angus King (I-Maine).

This bill will enhance and expand recreation opportunities by investing in modern technology commonly found in smartphone applications to provide anglers, boaters, and other users with the information they need to safely and legally enjoy offshore waters and federal saltwater fisheries.

“America’s incredible saltwater recreation opportunities should be easily enjoyed by all,” said Joel Pedersen, president and CEO of the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership. “The MAPOceans Act will help simplify boating and fishing experiences by digitizing complex and shifting regulations, making recreation information available to the public in real time. TRCP thanks Representatives Fry and Levin for their leadership to introduce and advance this important recreation legislation.”

The MAPOceans Act builds on the success of the MAPLand Act, passed in 2022, and the MAPWaters Act, which passed out of the House of Representatives in January 2025, by directing NOAA to digitize navigation and recreational use rules for marine waters and federal fisheries, and to make those resources readily available to the public. The hundreds of thousands of offshore ocean miles and numerous saltwater fish species regulated by NOAA present enormous recreational opportunities where restrictions are difficult to access and constantly changing. MAPOceans directs the federal agency to compile those rules in digital form so they can be integrated into GPS units and smartphone applications that are popular with boaters and anglers, making that information available to the public in real time.

This newly digitized public information would include:

• Status information on which waterways are open or closed to entry or watercraft, low-elevation aircraft, or diving.

• The areas of waterways with restrictions on motorized propulsion, horsepower, or gasoline fuel.

• Types of recreational vessels that are restricted on each area of a waterway.

• The location and geographic boundaries of fishing restrictions on recreational fishing, including full or partial closures, no-take zones, and fishing restrictions within or surrounding marine protected areas.

• Fishing regulations concerning specific types of equipment or bait, such as restrictions on the use of circle hooks, descending devices, and trolling.

“The MAPOceans Act will provide many benefits for the millions of saltwater anglers who fish our nation’s marine waters every year,” said Glenn Hughes, president and CEO of the American Sportfishing Association. “This legislation will ease access to information on federal fishing regulations through navigation tools and mapping applications, helping anglers and boaters stay up-to-date with changing regulations and opportunities. ASA and the recreational fishing industry thank Representatives Fry and Levin for their leadership of this legislation, which will simplify access to a wide range of recreational information, allowing anglers to feel confident they’re in compliance with the law as they’re heading out on the water.”

To help educate hunters and anglers on this suite of important, bipartisan, access legislation, the TRCP launched the MAPping Public Access webpage that breaks down the history, status, and relevance of the MAPLand, MAPWaters, and MAPOceans Acts.

Learn more about TRCP’s work to improve your access to public lands and waters HERE.

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May 13, 2025

Menhaden Management Board to Continue Exploring Chesapeake Bay Management Changes

Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission board agrees to continue with plans toward further precautionary management of Bay’s menhaden fishery

On May 7, after discussing a memo which detailed potential management approaches to improve the precautionary management of Chesapeake Bay’s menhaden fishery, the Menhaden Management Board (MMB) of the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission agreed to continue gathering information in order to take better-informed management action in the future.

Each board member was essentially tasked with coming up with questions and possible tasks to be investigated by a technical committee – state scientists appointed by the board to address scientific needs and provide a range of risk assessments, justifications, and likely outcomes of different management options – to be discussed at the next ASMFC meeting in August. What this means is that the detailed memo developed by a dedicated MMB work group is moving forward, and that the board will have more time this summer to delve into details of the data and the merits of each management approach, to ensure they provide the technical committee with a more thoughtful plan of action for analysis.

Foreign-owned Omega Protein removes millions of pounds of menhaden annually from Bay waters. Credit: CosmoVision Media

Last August, the MMB created a work group to “consider and evaluate options for further precautionary management of Chesapeake Bay menhaden fisheries, including time and area closures to be protective of piscivorous birds and fish during critical points of their life cycle.” The work group included MMB members representing eight states: Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, and Georgia. Since that time, the work group gathered as much data as possible, ranging from osprey and finfish predator diet data to monthly fishing effort data, to develop a memo that illustrates potential management approaches to address their charge. These potential approaches include seasonal closures, area closures, fishing effort distribution controls, and decreases to the current Chesapeake Bay Reduction Fishery Cap, all of which could be utilized individually or in combination to manage the Bay’s menhaden fishery more effectively.

Over three-quarters of the coastwide Atlantic menhaden quota is taken from Virginia’s waters and adjacent federal waters.

For many years, the public has been sounding the alarm about the outsized impacts of the menhaden reduction fishery on the Chesapeake Bay’s menhaden population during the commercial fishing season. While Atlantic menhaden are a migratory species that move up and down the coast throughout the year, the Bay contributes a majority of the Atlantic coastwide stock. So it’s no surprise that a myriad of Atlantic predators are reliant on menhaden as a food source in the Bay, from beloved striped bass (70 to 90 percent of which originate from Chesapeake Bay) to the iconic osprey, which has been suffering with remarkable breeding failures in the lower Bay over the last few years.

The osprey issue was the primary impetus for the MMB to create the work group last year, because data indicated that a lack of food availability during chick-rearing season – most importantly, nutrient-dense menhaden, as highlighted by researchers – was causing widespread osprey nest failure in various areas of the Chesapeake, most notably Mobjack Bay. While the reduction fleet doesn’t fish much inside Mobjack Bay itself, it’s widely known that menhaden schools move constantly throughout that bay, the Chesapeake Bay, and beyond, and the harvest of entire schools in one area could mean that an entire potential food source is taken away from predators in not only that same area, but also from predators in other areas where harvested menhaden could have migrated.

Chesapeake Bay menhaden are a critical food source for ospreys and striped bass. Credit: Chesapeake Bay Program

Naturally, dealing with ever-moving fish stocks and ever-changing environmental conditions is a huge undertaking for fisheries managers, as we see all the time at the ASMFC and the regional fishery management councils. Thanks to public advocacy and the commission’s dedication to the resource, we have a robust, ecosystem-based management framework in place for Atlantic menhaden, which allows regulators to more effectively manage menhaden for their comprehensive ecosystem role to create a more sustainable coastwide fishery.

Unfortunately, what we still don’t have are data specific to menhaden within the Chesapeake Bay. This essentially creates a gap between the ecosystem models and the reality on the water, because the management framework can’t “see” how the Chesapeake Bay menhaden harvest is impacting the Bay ecosystem. When nearly a quarter of the coastwide quota is taken from Virginia’s portion of Chesapeake Bay, and over three-quarters are taken from Virginia state waters and adjacent federal waters, those impacts could be massive to the region.

The largest fishery by volume in the Chesapeake Bay, in Virginia, and along the Atlantic coast operates with no data on the amount of menhaden present within the primary area of harvest.

For the last few years, TRCP, our partners, and the public have been trying to answer important questions about the Bay’s menhaden, primarily by supporting a study plan developed by the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, in partnership with the reduction industry itself, as well as the recreational angling and conservation communities. The Virginia General Assembly has failed to fund this work multiple times in the past few years, mainly due to industry opposition. If that research were to be funded, Virginia managers and the ASMFC would finally have much more information at their fingertips to make informed decisions about how to manage this fishery more effectively.

The only menhaden processing plant still operating on the East Coast is Omega Protein’s facility in Reedville, VA. Credit: CosmoVision Media 

It frankly makes no sense that the largest fishery by volume in the Chesapeake Bay, in Virginia, and along the Atlantic coast operates with no data on the amount of menhaden present within the primary area of harvest. Especially when we know the outsized role that menhaden play in the diets of so many iconic Atlantic predators.

While the TRCP and partners continue to engage in advocacy to gather more Chesapeake Bay menhaden science, we are thankful to have the broad support of so many who also want to see improved menhaden science. Over the winter, we gathered more than 24,000 of your signatures in support of better menhaden science in the Bay, listened to your concerns, and are confident that with continued, strong advocacy, decision-makers at the state and regional levels will hear what we have to say and act. After this week’s MMB meeting, it’s clear that the ASMFC is already on board with improving the management of Chesapeake Bay’s menhaden fishery, and that to do so will take serious consideration of all the factors involved to solve this complex problem. We are encouraged by the board’s enthusiasm for the work group’s memo, and their clear desire to move forward with thoughtful action.

Stay tuned for the summer ASMFC meeting August 5-7 to see what the Menhaden Management Board determines it wants from its technical committee, and rest assured, the TRCP and partners will be collaborating during this time to be a part of the solution.

Banner image of menhaden purse boats courtesy CosmoVision Media; menhaden school image above courtesy Gaelin Rosenwaks

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