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With 70 percent of U.S. lands in private hands and many of our best hunt and fish opportunities occurring there, investing in voluntary conservation on working lands safeguards access, strengthens habitat and water quality, and ensures resilient landscapes.

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Jamelle Ellis joined the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership in 2022. Jamelle spent the last three years as an environmental sustainability…

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Why TRCP Works to Conserve America’s Special Places

TRCP works to conserve special places like the Boundary Waters and landscapes that define hunting and fishing. Here's why.

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September 12, 2025

Weigh in on Behalf of America’s Backcountry

Hunters and anglers can help shape the future of our national forests

Anyone who has spent time hunting and fishing on our national forests knows that success often depends on putting some distance between yourself and roads. Roadless areas—casually called the backcountry—are essential to America’s sporting traditions and wildlife management.

These roadless landscapes provide secure refuge for elk, mule deer, and other big game species, ensuring healthy herds and sustaining increasingly rare over-the-counter hunting opportunities. State wildlife agencies have long emphasized that blocks of secure habitat are critical for effective herd management and for preventing displacement of wildlife onto private lands.

For anglers, roadless areas conserve cold, clean headwaters that sustain wild trout and salmon, and roughly 70 percent of roadless areas contain habitat for native fish.

These qualities are why the sporting community values roadless areas and sees them as a crucial part of the future of hunting and fishing in America.

The Proposal to Rescind the Roadless Rule

On August 29, the U.S. Department of Agriculture published a notice proposing to rescind the 2001 Roadless Area Conservation Rule—a long-standing policy designed to maintain these backcountry values. The public comment period is open through September 19.

A primary argument for rescission is to allow more flexibility for wildfire suppression and forest management. Hunters and anglers understand this does not have to be an either/or choice. We can support proactive management to reduce wildfire risk and improve forest health while maintaining safeguards that are critical for fish, wildlife, and our sporting traditions.

A Balanced Path Forward

Hunters and anglers support a middle ground approach to managing roadless areas. This approach respects backcountry values and provides flexibility where it’s needed. That means:

  • Conserving core backcountry habitat for fish and wildlife while allowing thinning, prescribed burning, and restoration projects to protect communities and improve habitat.
  • Limiting costly new road construction so that scarce agency funding can go toward maintaining the 370,000 miles of existing national forest roads that already provide access for hunters, anglers, and local economies.
  • Accommodating multiple uses, including livestock grazing and motorized and non-motorized recreation.

The Roadless Rule was designed to strike this balance. Rather than scrapping it altogether, the USDA should work with hunters, anglers, and other stakeholders to adapt and improve the rule to ensure it remains durable, practical, and true to the values we share. We have seen this approach work before with the Idaho and Colorado Roadless Rules, and we can apply that success to the rest of the National Forest System.

Take Action

This comment period is our chance to ensure that the future of America’s backcountry reflects hunting and fishing values. By speaking up, we can help secure lasting hunting and fishing opportunities for future generations of sportsmen and women.

Hunters and anglers can make a difference by commenting before September 19.

Here are some important talking points to include in your comments:

  • Roadless areas are critical to America’s sporting traditions. They provide secure habitat for elk, deer, and other big game, and conserve headwaters that sustain native trout and salmon. These landscapes ensure that future generations of hunters and anglers will have the same opportunities we enjoy today.
  • Hunters and anglers know that flexibility can be added to the rule to reduce wildfire risk while also improving forest health and maintaining conservation safeguards that are critical for fish, wildlife, and sporting traditions.
  • The Forest Service should work with hunters, anglers, and other stakeholders to adapt and improve the rule so it remains durable, practical, and true to the values we share.
  • A balanced approach will ensure our forests remain healthy, our communities are safer, and our sporting traditions persist.

One Response to “Weigh in on Behalf of America’s Backcountry”

  1. Roadless areas are critical to America’s sporting traditions. They provide secure habitat for elk, deer, and other big game, and conserve headwaters that sustain native trout and salmon. These landscapes ensure that future generations of hunters and anglers will have the same opportunities we enjoy today.
    Hunters and anglers know that flexibility can be added to the rule to reduce wildfire risk while also improving forest health and maintaining conservation safeguards that are critical for fish, wildlife, and sporting traditions.
    The Forest Service should work with hunters, anglers, and other stakeholders to adapt and improve the rule so it remains durable, practical, and true to the values we share.
    A balanced approach will ensure our forests remain healthy, our communities are safer, and our sporting traditions persist.

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September 10, 2025

Congressional Review Act Risks Long-Term Dysfunction of Public Land Management

What could be seen as victories in the short term, would make for lasting problems in the future

From balancing a variety of multiple uses and the growing demands on those uses, to invasive species and increased risk of wildfire, America’s 640 million acres of public lands face legitimate management challenges. Many stakeholders, including lawmakers, are understandably frustrated with the often-slow pace of management planning, and sometimes the ultimate outcome of a land-use plan is controversial.

However, instead of following established procedures to work through controversy, some federal lawmakers are turning to an obscure tool called the Congressional Review Act to revoke a few specific Bureau of Land Management land-use plans that were recently completed. This tactic would have far-reaching consequences for industry, land managers, and the millions of Americans who rely on these public lands by crippling the BLM’s ability to adjust future land management, ultimately adding to frustrations and limiting solutions to future management challenges. The good news is that Congress and the administration can address their concerns without resorting to such drastic measures.

 A Better Approach Already Exists

The BLM manages 245 million acres of public lands, located primarily in the West. Managing all these federal public lands for multiple uses is complex and often contentious. Thankfully, the BLM has clear legal authority to amend or revise Resource Management Plans through established administrative processes. These procedures are designed to address shortcomings in existing plans while accepting input from stakeholders, state and local governments, and the public.

Lawmakers can work with the administration to address their concerns through the BLM’s established revision process, which doesn’t trigger the harmful, long-lasting consequences that would accompany use of the CRA.

Application of the Congressional Review Act

Since its passage in 1996, the CRA has not been applied to federal land-use plans. That changed in June 2025 when the Government Accountability Office, responding to a request from Congress, issued a nonbinding report asserting that a few specific BLM RMPs qualified as rules under the CRA.

Our 21st century landscapes would be stuck with 20th century management, meaning everything from land sales and disposal lists to grazing and mineral permits would remain at their old quotas. This would leave energy and mineral industries, ranchers, and public land hunters and anglers in the lurch.

Following the report, resolutions of disapproval were introduced for the Central Yukon RMP (Alaska), Miles City RMP Amendment (Montana), and North Dakota Field Office RMP. The U.S. House of Representatives voted on September 3 to approve those resolutions, and the U.S. Senate now may choose to take action on them. Final passage of these resolutions would rescind the land-use plans.  

A Short-Term Win for Long-Term Losses

Using the CRA to rescind a controversial land-use plan might gain short-term benefits for some interests, but those will be outweighed by the negative long-term consequences to public lands and local communities.

For one, if a revised land-use plan is disapproved through the CRA, the BLM would return to managing lands under the previous plan. In many cases, these land-use plans are decades old and likely wouldn’t address today’s multiple use needs.

Our 21st century landscapes would be stuck with 20th century management, meaning everything from land sales and disposal lists to grazing and mineral permits would remain at their old quotas. This would leave energy and mineral industries, ranchers, and public land hunters and anglers in the lurch.

Another significant factor in the CRA is the “substantially the same” clause. Once a land-use plan is disapproved, the agency would need to show that any future revisions to that plan are not “substantially the same” as the plan that was disapproved.  If this bar cannot be met, revisions would need to be “specifically authorized by a law” through an act of Congress. It seems unlikely that members of Congress will spend time authorizing future updates to public land management plans, which would leave the BLM stuck with outdated plans.   

A Scalpel, Not a Hammer

Land-use plans often require a scalpel and not a hammer to work through conflict and controversy. Fortunately, the BLM already has the authority and processes in place to make specific changes.

The current administration has sufficient time to complete meaningful updates to controversial RMPs through their normal planning process; some of these have already been initiated.

TRCP encourages Congress to work with the administration to resolve controversy through established processes that also preserve the BLM’s ability to responsibly manage public lands for the future. The CRA is the wrong tool for this job.

September 9, 2025

Fix Our Forests Act a Bipartisan Solution to a National Problem

Wildfire resilience and forest management have never mattered more

Across the West, when we look at our mountains, we don’t just see the beautiful landscape, we see the lifeblood of the people who live here. These peaks store our water, support our economy, and shape our way of life. But this summer, like every recent summer, is a reminder of what’s at stake: smoky skies, communities on edge, families and businesses evacuated, and whole watersheds under threat. As far as the East Coast, smoke of fires from Western blazes reach across the nation, reminding us that we breathe the same air.

So far in 2025, over 1 million acres have burned in large wildfires across the country.  Wildfire risk has become constant throughout the year in many areas, and now “normal” means living with an expectation of frequent and bigger blazes. Responding to this reality isn’t a one-and-done project — it’s a generational commitment.

That’s why bipartisan support in Congress for wildfire resilience and forest management has never mattered more.

The Fix Our Forests Act was first introduced by Rep. Bruce Westerman (R-Ark.) and passed the U.S. House of Representatives with a strong bipartisan vote earlier this year. The bill has now gained momentum in the U.S. Senate with bipartisan support led by Sen. John Hickenlooper (D-Colo.), Sen. John Curtis (R-Utah), Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), and Sen. Tim Sheehy (R-Mont.).  The bill reflects that old-fashioned American idea that when a crisis hits, we work together to find solutions.

The bill is designed to accelerate the pace of wildfire mitigation while maintaining the necessary safeguards for fish and wildlife that matter to all of us. Central to the bill is the concept of “Fireshed Management Areas,” targeted zones of up to 10,000 acres where wildfire poses the greatest danger to people and water supplies. Within these zones, risk-reduction projects like ecological thinning, prescribed fire, and fuel breaks can move forward faster by cutting through red tape, while still benefiting fish, wildlife, and their habitat.

The Fix Our Forests Act is also innovative. For the first time, this legislation recognizes that projects to restore and improve floodplains and wetlands can demonstrably reduce wildfire risk to downstream communities, including the long-term impacts wildfires can have on valuable drinking water supplies for rural and urban populations. Identifying the need for smarter, more coordinated responses to wildfire, the bill also creates a national Wildfire Intelligence Center, a state-of-the-art hub for real-time fire data and rapid agency coordination modeled on proven science and public safety systems.

The Fix Our Forests Act is pragmatic, collaborative, and designed for the scale of the threat. The senators’ approach — building consensus, defending conservation values, and insisting on urgency — reflects what leadership looks like when the stakes are highest. Congress has the opportunity to enact into law this piece of legislation that will directly benefit communities throughout the West, and America, for generations to come.

A version of this blog originally ran in The Daily Sentinel out of Grand Junction, Colorado, on August 30, 2025.

September 4, 2025

Bipartisan Headwaters Protection Act Reintroduced to Safeguard America’s Forests and Watersheds

Hunters, anglers, and conservation groups applaud legislation aimed at new investments in source watersheds and resilient forests. 

On Wednesday, a bipartisan group of U.S. Senators – including Michael Bennet (D-Colo.), Mike Crapo (R-Idaho), John Hickenlooper (D-Colo.), Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.), and James Risch (R-Idaho) introduced the Headwaters Protection Act in an effort to invest in America’s forests and watersheds by expanding support for two U.S. Forest Service Programs created in the 2018 Farm Bill: The Water Source Protection Program (WSPP) and the Watershed Condition Framework (WCF). These two programs are unique in that they are the only Forest Service authorities that specifically support efforts to identify and implement conservation and restoration efforts to improve the quality of water originating on National Forest Service lands, which provide benefits for both downstream water users and fish and wildlife.  

If passed, the bill would support critical public-private partnerships working to ensure our National Forests provide clean water to downstream communities, benefit agricultural water users, and safeguard fish and wildlife habitat that hunters, anglers, and communities rely on. 

Originally introduced in 2023, the reintroduced bill aims to make important updates that will expand participation, increase funding, and boost resilience.  

“Healthy source watersheds improve water reliability and quality, bolster resilience to drought and wildfire, and sustain the fish and wildlife habitat that hunters and anglers depend on,” said Alex Funk, TRCP’s director of water resources. “The Headwaters Protection Act will strengthen public-private partnerships to accelerate restoration and conservation of these landscapes, and we applaud Senators Bennet, Crapo, Hickenlooper, Luján, and Risch for their leadership in introducing this important bipartisan legislation aimed at keeping our forests and watersheds healthy.” 

From backcountry trout streams to irrigation canals that sustain farms, healthy headwaters are the foundation of both America’s sporting traditions and our economy. National forests supply drinking water to more than 150 million Americans and sustain countless fish and wildlife species that hunters and anglers depend on. The Headwaters Protection Act would:  

  • Reauthorize the Water Source Protection Program (WSPP) and increase the authorization of appropriations for the program from $10 million per year to $30 million per year.   
  • Broaden the range of water users, including rural communities and Tribes, who could participate in and benefit from the WSPP.  
  • Reduce financial barriers for water users to participate in the WSPP by providing more flexible match requirements.  
  • Prioritize WSPP projects that benefit drinking water quality and improve resilience to wildfire and other natural disasters.  
  • Make a technical change to the Watershed Condition Framework (WCF) that ensures healthy watersheds do not become further degraded and authorizes $30 million in new appropriations per year for the implementation of locally led watershed restoration plans.   

The WSPP and WCF projects would:  

  • Conserve and restore freshwater resources within National Forest System Lands and nearby non-federal lands, which supply drinking water to one in five Americans and contain much of our country’s best remaining cold-water habitat for salmon, steelhead, and trout.  
  • Complement and strengthen the Forest Service’s efforts to respond to growing wildfire risk by encouraging partnerships with water users to reduce threats associated with wildfire to water supplies. 

Learn more about TRCP’s work on Habitat & Clean Water | Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership


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.

August 26, 2025

Data Centers, Energy, and Water: What Hunters and Anglers Need to Know

Exploring how digital infrastructure shapes the natural systems hunters and anglers depend on

The backbone of today’s digital world is not something most hunters and anglers think about when they log onto a mapping app, stream a video, or upload photos from the field. But behind every click sits a vast network of data centers – massive facilities filled with computer systems, servers, and cooling equipment that run 24/7 to power online services, cloud storage, and emerging technologies like artificial intelligence (AI). You might have heard about one being built near you. 

And like any form of infrastructure, these facilities come with costs. Chief among them are growing demands for electricity and water – resources that are also vital to sustaining the fish, wildlife, and habitats hunters and anglers depend on. 

Growth and Scale

Across the U.S., between 3,000 and 5,400 data centers are already operating, with new facilities rapidly being built to meet the booming demand for cloud computing, AI, and digital services. The United States hosts more data centers than any other country, and projections show their electricity use could rise from 17 gigawatts in 2022 to as much as 130 gigawatts by 2030. For context, that’s more than 100 times the output of a single large nuclear power plant. 

Water use is just as significant. Cooling massive banks of servers requires millions of gallons per day in some locations, while additional indirect water demand comes from the power plants that generate electricity for these facilities. In arid states like Utah and New Mexico, these demands are sparking debates over whether scarce water should support fast-growing tech hubs or be reserved for communities, agriculture, and wildlife habitat. 

Why This Matters for Fish and Wildlife

The connection between digital infrastructure and conservation may not be obvious at first, but the ripple effects are real. 

Data centers place demands on three linked resources:  

  • Electricity: Data centers require enormous amounts of power to operate and meeting this need puts pressure on local energy grids and drives the increased demand for new energy development, whether oil and gas, coal, wind, solar, or other sources, which in turn can lead to increased development and fragmentation on the landscape. 
  • Water: Water is used directly for cooling and indirectly in power generation. This dual use can be especially challenging in arid states where every drop counts. 
  • Habitat: Construction of new facilities, transmission lines, and cooling infrastructure often requires large footprints that can fragment or displace wildlife habitat. 

One notable example comes from New Mexico, where Facebook secured a deal guaranteeing access to 4.5 million gallons of water per day for a new data center campus. While local officials welcomed the economic boost, the deal sparked questions about long-term water availability in a drought-prone region. 

Balancing Growth and Conservation

The digital economy is here to stay, and the demand for data will only increase. But growth doesn’t have to come at the expense of fish, wildlife, and clean water.  

The Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership is committed to working with diverse stakeholders to support energy development approaches that avoid and minimize impacts to the nation’s fish and wildlife resources to align with its Energy Platform such as: 

  • Smarter Siting: Prioritizing development on already disturbed lands rather than intact habitats. 
  • Water Stewardship: Using non-potable water, closed-loop cooling, and transparent reporting to reduce stress on drought-prone watersheds. 
  • Wildlife Safeguards: Incorporating habitat data and migration mapping into planning decisions so that critical fish and wildlife resources are conserved. 

Looking Ahead

The growth of data centers is part of a broader digital transformation that shows no sign of slowing. At the same time, water scarcity and energy demand are critical challenges in many parts of the country. As these facilities continue to expand, decisions about how they are sited, powered, and cooled will play an important role in balancing economic growth with long-term resource sustainability. 

By understanding how data centers function and the pressures they create, hunters, anglers, and other conservation-minded citizens can better appreciate the connections between digital infrastructure and the natural systems we all rely on. 


Learn more about TRCP’s work on energy development and critical minerals production, including how TRCP is working to ensure this growth avoids and minimizes impacts on hunter and angler access and opportunity.  Click HERE.

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