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House Agriculture Committee Chairman GT Thompson Introduces Farm Bill Proposal 

Hunters and anglers depend on strong Conservation and Forestry Titles, and TRCP will closely evaluate the bill's impacts as it moves forward.

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January 22, 2026

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January 20, 2026

How Everglades Restoration Work Benefits Hunters

South Florida hunter and conservationist Richard Martinez, state chapter chair for Backcountry Hunters and Anglers and past guest of the MeatEater Podcast, explains why restoration work will improve habitat and access

When I was a young boy, our teenage babysitter taught my brothers and I about snipe. But the snipe she told tales of were elusive animals that could only be caught by hand – if you had a good enough eye to spot them and were quick enough to snatch them up. Her boyfriend took my brothers and I into a field of tall grass one sunny afternoon, and I’ll never forget watching him diving head-first for these mystical creatures, which the rest of us failed to spot, but always coming up empty-handed.

Only years later did I learn that snipe were real – small, tasty game birds found in functioning wetlands that still allow hunters to walk, flush, and hunt effectively – not the imaginary, four-legged, furry creatures I had conjured up as a kid. I never had a chance to participate in a real snipe hunt until recently, when I joined Richard Martinez, chapter chair for the Florida Chapter of Backcountry Hunters and Anglers, as he hunted snipe in wetlands on public lands of the eastern Everglades – a region where he has stalked various species including whitetail deer, waterfowl, wild hogs, small game, and most of all, Osceola turkey, for the last decade.

Credit: Richard Martinez

“Turkey, definitely turkey, that’s my jam,” Martinez says. He knows Osceolas well enough that MeatEater’s Steve Rinella featured him in a successful hunt on an episode in 2023. Martinez’s knowledge comes from learning about Everglades habitat and hunting first-hand in the field over many years.

A Self-Made Florida Hunter

“I was exposed a little bit to hunting as a kid, but my father never hunted,” Martinez said. He explained to me that his uncles took him out in the woods a few times as a kid, which inspired curiosity in him, but he didn’t really get into hunting until he was an adult. And he did so in a very unique place – the uplands and wetlands on public lands of southeastern Florida.

I’ve known Martinez for a couple of years, since I first worked with him on a blog about hunting in the Everglades, and besides enjoying his company on a unique subtropical bird hunt, we had a chance to talk more about the importance of Everglades restoration from a hunter’s perspective. As we trod miles of wet prairie jumping Wilson’s snipe, he explained that the Everglades today offer a patchwork of both healthy habitat that’s great for hunting and fishing and areas that are highly degraded, compared to how they were historically. And after he’d bagged several birds, we chatted more at his truck about why he thinks current Everglades restoration projects are important, why he thinks hunters should support these efforts, and where he thinks more focus needs to be. Those wet prairies, working waters, and huntable landscapes don’t happen by accident – they are shaped by long-term restoration efforts like the ones TRCP members support.

How the Glades Have Changed

Martinez said that the Everglades today can be described as “sort of a Frankenstein’s monster.”

“It’s a resemblance of what it used to be. There are elements of it that feel intact, that feel pristine, and then there are other elements of it that you really feel the impact of man, whether it’s the invasives or the change in hydrology.”

He brought up a well-known but dire reality in conservation circles – that fully half of the historical Everglades are gone. That so much of the watershed has been lost. Yet the region still receives all of the water it used to, often with nowhere to move it.

“It’s turned into municipalities,” he said. “It’s my house, it’s my neighbor’s house, it’s where we live and work, as well as where the agricultural industry does business.”

Decades ago, federal and state agencies worked with conservation groups and others develop a long-term, master plan for Everglades restoration known as CERP – the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan. CERP was first authorized by Congress through the Water Resources Development Act (WRDA) of 2000, to provide a roadmap to be implemented by a federal-state partnership “to restore, protect, and preserve the region’s water resources by addressing the quantity, quality, timing, and distribution of water.” For hunters, these projects shape where water sits, when it moves, and what habitat looks like during the season

Still used today as the umbrella for most Everglades project work, CERP includes larger water storage and treatment projects like the under-construction Everglades Agricultural Area Reservoir and C-43 West Basin Storage Reservoir, a recently completed project west of Lake Okeechobee designed to hold 55 billion gallons in the 18-square-mile reservoir off the Caloosahatchee River to help store and manage basin runoff to meet estuary needs during the dry season and prevent harmful, high-volume discharges of fresh water during the wet season. The project will help regulate water flows, reduce toxic algae blooms off Florida’s coast, and protect marine fisheries. Collectively, all the CERP projects are designed to gradually undo as much damage as possible caused by a century of projects focused on draining and compartmentalizing the Everglades that led to their downward spiral. But they require ongoing federal and state funding to ultimately see completion.

Need for Projects Farther North

Also like Frankenstein’s monster, effective Everglades restoration must be made up of many collective parts. Martinez said he supports every project written into CERP, and he sees benefits for hunters and other South Florida residents from all current efforts. He also indicated that he would like to see more projects that address water flowing into Lake Okeechobee from the north and surrounding areas, to improve the water quality and the timing of the water going into the lake.

Lake Okeechobee, located near the northern reaches of the Everglades, once served as the largest source of fresh water for the Everglades, supporting the wetlands, food sources, and wildlife movements hunters have long depended on. Historically, it overflowed its southern bank in the wet season to create the vast, slow-moving “River of Grass” that flowed south all the way to Florida Bay, nourishing the entire ecosystem and diverse habitats along the way. But today the lake only partially serves that purpose, due to management necessary to protect lives and infrastructure.

“If we want our values and our interests to be heard, to be represented, we have to be involved.”

“I think a lot of the projects that do get the spotlight are the ones below the lake,” he said. “I think all those projects are really important and necessary, but I don’t think those projects are going to be as impactful until we figure out things further upstream.” 

Martinez emphasized that hunters who care about the Everglades need to be highly engaged in conservation efforts to protect what they love. Not just by reaching out to decisionmakers by phone or action alert, but by showing up where management decisions are made. Like public meetings of the South Florida Water Management District and Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. And he warns against hunters only making decisions based on social media posts, where “the loudest voice has the most impact.” After all, hunters are accustomed to science guiding management decisions through established seasons, population data, and regulations, rather than the volume of online debate.

“If we weren’t stakeholders at the table we would just be pushed out of the conversation,” he said. “If we want our values and our interests to be heard, to be represented, we have to be involved.”

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TRCP’s Joel Webster Named Chairman of American Wildlife Conservation Partners 

Appointment reflects TRCP leadership in collaborative wildlife conservation policy

(Washington, D.C.) – Joel Webster, Chief Conservation Officer at the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership, has been named as 2026 Chairman of the American Wildlife Conservation Partners – a coalition of 52 organizations that represent the interests of America’s millions of hunter-conservationists, professional wildlife and natural resource managers, outdoor recreation users, conservation educators, and wildlife scientists. 

AWCP works to proactively address the most pressing challenges facing sportsmen and sportswomen, wildlife, and our treasured lands and waters by working collaboratively to advance wildlife habitat conservation, public access, and America’s outdoor traditions. AWCP members regularly interact and engage with federal agencies and members of Congress through joint letters and more.  

“AWCP plays a critical role bringing together the whole of the hunting, recreational shooting, wildlife conservation community to advocate for shared outcomes,” said TRCP Chief Conservation Officer and AWCP Chairman Joel Webster. “I’m honored to serve as AWCP chairman and look forward to working with partners to advance policies that benefit wildlife, habitat, and the future of hunting and fishing.” 

In 2024, AWCP released Wildlife for the 21st Century, Volume VII (W-21), a consensus-driven policy document that outlines key strategies to conserve wildlife and habitat nationwide, enhance public access, and safeguard America’s outdoor traditions. TRCP played an important role in the development of W-21, helping to shape policy priorities, and advance collaborative solutions reflected in the publication. 

A passionate big game hunter based in Missoula, Montana, Webster has more than two decades of experience in conservation policy and partnership-driven advocacy. Since joining TRCP in 2007, he has helped lead the organization’s work to conserve wildlife habitat and safeguard access to quality places to hunt and fish. He is a professional member of the Boone and Crockett Club and previously served on the federal Hunting and Wildlife Conservation Council, advising the secretaries of the Interior and Agriculture on habitat and access priorities.   

In his role as AWCP Chairman, Webster will help guide the coalition’s efforts to advance consensus-based policy recommendations that support wildlife conservation and America’s sporting heritage. 

Learn more about AWCP HERE

Learn more about TRCP’s leadership HERE.  


The TRCP is your resource for all things conservation. In our weekly Roosevelt Report, you’ll receive the latest news on 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.

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January 15, 2026

Deer Season: Hunting & CWD – A Minnesota Season Revisited 

TRCP’s Aaron Field revisits a Minnesota deer season and the shared responsibility of responding to CWD

Last fall, Minnesota hunters entered deer season amid new realities – changing regulations, heightened awareness of chronic wasting disease, and a shared responsibility to protect the future of wild deer and the traditions built around them. In his first installment, Aaron Field explored what those changes meant at the outset of the season in Minnesota – a true season of firsts. In this second installment, he reflects how those realities played out in the field, where family, ethics, and stewardship intersect. What follows is a reminder that responding to CWD isn’t separate from the hunting experience – it’s increasingly part of it. 

“I want to wait for a big buck or an adult doe.” 

When my 11-year-old told me that before we walked out to the stand for our first hunt of Minnesota’s youth deer season, I did my best to hide my chuckle. When I was her age, any deer, button buck to wall-hanger, that walked by would’ve been in some serious danger, so I expected that conviction to fade pretty quickly. Especially given the temperature was well below freezing. So, a couple hours later when a pair of young deer walked right under us, I made sure she had the rifle up and ready. 

“They’re both button bucks. You should have a clean shot so get your scope on one if you want to.” 

She pulled up her rifle and took aim but didn’t take the safety off. I was surprised to hear her whisper: “I’m going to wait.” We watched the pair slowly work their way past us, giving her several layup opportunities that I was proud to see her pass up. 

That pride changed to apprehension when she said the same thing about a six-point buck the next day. I can appreciate restraint, and I’ve cultivated some small amount in myself with age, but I still wrestle with the idea that only 140+ class bucks are worthy. I was really hoping that watching hunting shows on TV hadn’t given her unrealistic expectations or an unhealthy obsession with big antlers. As it turned out, I didn’t need to worry. When that same buck chased a doe past us several days later, she had the gun up and was sure disappointed that he never hopped to the right side of the fence. 

“There’s a deer coming, Dad!” 

She spotted just about every deer before I did that first weekend. I can’t quite explain how, given her incredible ability to fall asleep immediately after getting settled in the stand.  

The lead doe must have been having an off day, because the amount of noise and motion we made getting ready really ought to have spooked her. Somehow it didn’t, and when the doe paused 15 yards out, close to broadside, my new deer hunter didn’t hesitate.  

I got my start with a 30-06, so I had my doubts about the little .300 Blackout she was using, but the shot-placement video we watched together (courtesy of our friends at the National Deer Association) paid off and the doe only went about 20 yards before piling up. The only downside, if you can call it that, of her shot placement was that she didn’t have any heart meat to bring home. 

We loaded the field-dressed doe into a wagon to pull out of the woods, with her doing most of the dragging. As we walked out, I reminded her that I had a work trip the next day, one for which I still had an awful lot of preparation to do, and that we should probably bring the deer to a processor. 

“I really want to do it myself, Dad, but if you’re too busy I understand.” 

Any father reading this can guess what we did next; I grabbed my knives, and we got to work

For the first time, our processing included an extra step: removing lymph node samples to send in for CWD testing (which my lovely and medically inclined wife did for me, confirming yet again my genius in tricking her into marrying me). Although not required during the youth season, I wanted deer managers to have as much information as possible as they implemented their response plan to a nearby CWD detection last season. It was far less complicated than I expected it to be, and I’m sure I could do it myself in a pinch. 

Other than pulling lymph node samples, the only other tweak I made to our processing was putting the tenderloins in the freezer until our test results came back, which took less than a week. It pained me a little to do that, as I would have liked to grill them the same day, but having them the night before the regular firearms season opened was almost as good, and knowing that CWD was “Not Detected” was reassuring, even though that’s what I expected. Moving forward, if prevalence in my area increases, meaning a deer is more likely to test positive, we will probably start wearing protective gloves during processing. But for now, I didn’t feel that it was necessary. 

It was interesting to me where CWD and the new regulations came up in conversations with local hunters in the leadup to the season. In the first, I had just helped some friends haul a load of cattle home from summer pasture. As we left the gate, a neighbor pulled up on her four-wheeler to ask about veterinary treatment for one of her own cows. After getting some advice from my friends (I’d be the wrong one to ask, believe me), she asked us “You guys heard about the new CWD rules, right?” I had, but hadn’t talked about it with my friends, so I was pleased to hear the neighbor give a pretty complete rundown of the new regulations, and a solid overview of CWD’s threat in general. I wish I would’ve asked where she got her information, because wherever it came from, it was sound. 

The next conversation came in a tractor during corn harvest, just a week or so before the rifle season. I was helping the same friends again when my replacement grain cart driver showed up and climbed into the “banker’s seat” next to me to ride along for a while. 

“So what’s the deal with this CWD stuff? I see all kinds of conflicting information on it and it’s hard to know what’s true.” 

Now this was a smart and thoughtful individual, and someone who has been hunting for a couple decades, so I was a little dismayed that even he was having a hard time sorting through the quagmire of mis- and disinformation that has been spread about this disease, but after 15 or 20 minutes of talking we were on the same page. He mentioned that food safety was his number one concern, and that he had no interest in risking eating meat from a CWD-infected animal. He also seemed concerned when we talked about what uncontrolled CWD spread could mean for overall herd health, deer numbers, and the likelihood of seeing big, old bucks. I left the conversation with renewed motivation to help other hunters find good information among all the bad, and to make sure that decisionmakers understand the importance of wild deer herds and wild deer hunting when they decide how to fund things like CWD research, management, and response. 

In many ways, this was a season of firsts – first hunts, first hard decisions, and the first time CWD factored directly into how my daughter and I handled a deer from field to freezer. It won’t be the last. As hunters continue to adapt to evolving wildlife challenges, seasons like this one remind us that stewardship isn’t abstract or theoretical. It happens in the stand, at the processing table, and in the choices we make to protect the future of wild deer and the traditions that depend on them. 

I wish I could end this story with a couple of big buck pictures; one for my daughter and one for me, but that’s not how the season went. We spent a lot of time in the stand, saw a fair number of deer, and I even broke out the snowshoes on a day with a –25 windchill for a two-man still hunt during muzzleloader season. That went about as well as you might expect, but it was a welcome break from sitting in a stand. For the first time in years, I never pulled the trigger myself. Strangely, despite that, thanks to my daughter’s success I’d call 2025 my best deer season ever, and I can’t wait for 2026.

Deer Season – Hunting and CWD.

This new TRCP series shares the personal deer hunting stories of three staff members while exploring the practices aimed at addressing the spread of chronic wasting disease. This season, we invite you to follow along and take part in preserving what we love most about deer hunting. 

As deer seasons open across the country, hunters are packing gear, checking maps, and preparing for the moments that define another fall outdoors. But today’s deer hunters face new challenges – chief among them, the spread of Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD), a 100-percent fatal neurodegenerative wildlife disease that affects members of the deer family. While more and more hunters are finding CWD in their backyards, it remains a source of confusion for many.  

From pre-season prep and regulation changes to lessons learned in the woods and around deer camp, Deer Season – Hunting and CWD will show how everyday hunters are part of the solution. Along the way, you’ll find tips, resources, and reflections that tie together our love of the hunt with our shared responsibility to keep deer herds healthy for future generations. 

Learn more about Chronic Wasting Disease here.

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January 13, 2026

TRCP Welcomes Interior Actions Affirming Hunting and Fishing on Public Lands

An updated approach strengthens responsible hunting and fishing opportunities  

Washington, D.C. – Today, the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership welcomed Department of the Interior Secretarial Order 3447, signed by Secretary Doug Burgum, which reaffirms hunting and fishing access on public lands, including updates to how these opportunities are managed on National Wildlife Refuges. These efforts reflect a balanced commitment to wildlife management and the outdoor traditions supported by hunters and anglers. 

“Hunters and anglers have long been central to conserving wildlife and habitat in this country – funding conservation and supporting science-based management – and these actions help reinforce that legacy,” said Joel Pedersen, president and CEO for the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership. “We appreciate the Department of the Interior’s focus on ensuring that public lands provide meaningful, well-managed opportunities to hunt and fish.” 

The Secretarial Order contains directives for five DOI Bureaus. Among those are U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service-administered National Wildlife Refuges, which were created with strong support from hunters—who continue to contribute significantly to conservation funding today.  The 1997 Wildlife Refuge Improvement Act identified hunting as one of six priority, wildlife-dependent public uses that receive enhanced consideration in refuge management. By increasing scientifically regulated hunting opportunities consistent with state management, refuges can demonstrate effective wildlife stewardship and provide the public with a direct connection to conservation.  

The Secretarial Order also addresses how certain refuge management policies will be applied going forward, including the continued implementation of existing voluntary lead-free incentive programs.  

“TRCP contributed to the development of the Fish and Wildlife Service’s voluntary lead-free program, and we appreciate DOI continuing to implement this incentive-based approach,” continued Pedersen “We are excited to dig in and help the Department implement this important Secretarial Order.”

The Secretarial Order aligns with the broader direction set by the Make America Beautiful Again Commission by emphasizing collaborative conservation and agency coordination around public access for hunters and anglers. Together, these actions reflect an ongoing federal focus on expanded recreational opportunities.


The TRCP is your resource for all things conservation. In our weekly Roosevelt Report, you’ll receive the latest news on 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.

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