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All Eyes On The Atchafalaya Basin

The Lower Mississippi River Comprehensive Management Study moves forward despite slashed budget

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February 5, 2026

All Eyes On The Atchafalaya Basin

The Lower Mississippi River Comprehensive Management Study moves forward despite slashed budget

More than 50 fisheries biologists, hydrologists, foresters, engineers, private landowners, wetland ecologists, recreational and commercial fishermen and state and federal agency staff from Wildlife and Fisheries, Army Corps of Engineers and the United States Geological Survey gathered in Lafayette in April 2025 to discuss how to improve the Atchafalaya Basin.

Organized by the non-profit habitat conservation organization The Nature Conservancy and the Corps of Engineers, the group was selected to find some consensus on ways to help improve fisheries, tree health and water quality in the Atchafalaya while limiting sedimentation and the spread of invasive species in the lower river’s largest swamp.

The timing of the meeting was perfect, considering the Corps was in the middle of a Congressionally-mandated project called the Lower Mississippi River Comprehensive Management Study. The study, authorized by Congress in 2020 with extensive support from Louisiana lawmakers, told the Corps to look at issues affecting the Mississippi River from Missouri to the Gulf, everything from flood control and shipping to fisheries and wildlife habitat and wetland restoration.

Those who went to the two-day workshop left feeling like real progress was made. The wide-ranging opinions in the room didn’t always align, but there was general agreement that changing how much water was sent from the Mississippi River down the Atchafalaya River at certain times of the year could improve fisheries. Sediment traps could limit the silt that is clogging bayous and canals. Strategic cuts could be made in some canal and bayou banks to allow water to move into stagnant backwaters. It felt like a big step in the right direction.

Then, a month later, it was revealed the Lower Mississippi River Comprehensive Management Study had stopped. The remainder of the $25 million appropriated by Congress was an unceremonious victim of the broad, sweeping federal budget cuts applied with a chainsaw rather than a scalpel.

An important Study

In general, the last thing anyone advocating for habitat restoration in the Lower Mississippi River wanted to see was another lengthy study. Large parts of Louisiana’s coast have washed away in the last 50 years while study after study dragged on and the costs of that land loss and the projects needed to slow and repair it exploded.

However, significant changes, and even slight tweaks, in management of the lower Mississippi River and its swamps, floodplains, fisheries, navigation channels and flood protection will require scientific support, public buy in and the backing of sound engineers. Perhaps more importantly, the money to make any of those changes comes only after public engagement and studies show it is needed.

In the case of the Atchafalaya Basin or any floodplain or swamp connected to the Lower River, it will literally take an act of Congress for changes in authorizations and the money needed to dredge sediment and change the operation at the Old River Control Structure to allow more water from the Mississippi to move down the Atchafalaya River.

Stopping the study didn’t just slow progress in Louisiana. Mississippians, Tennesseans and Arkansans wanted results as well. They’ve all seen habitats along the Mississippi River and its tributaries decline, leading to a loss in fisheries and waterfowl production over the last half century. They’ve also dealt with historic floods and periodic droughts and increased sedimentation that has limited access to the river for recreation and commerce.

What’s Next?

The guarded optimism shared by those who participated in meetings conducted by the Corps throughout 2024 and early 2025 quickly turned into frustration. It seemed this could be another federal study started with promise and good intentions that would be shelved and produce no tangible improvements to fish and wildlife habitat and flood control.

However, thanks to Congressmen Troy Carter of Louisiana and Mike Ezell of Mississippi, both recreational fishermen, and four of their congressional colleagues, there may be hope the study continues towards its completion in 2027.

Carter and Ezell were the lead authors of a July 2, 2025 letter to the chairman of the House Energy and Water Appropriations Subcommittee urging it provide $7.5 million to continue the study, calling it “a pivotal opportunity to align navigation efficiency and safety, flood control systems, and restoration efforts to foster a healthier, safer Lower River system that benefits all stakeholders and river communities.”

Appropriators responded by releasing a budget in early January of this year that has $5 million directed to the Corps to continue working on the study Congressmen Carter and Ezell called “indispensable.” While not the full amount requested, it is certainly enough for the Corps’ New Orleans District to resume work.

Wading and weaving through federal bureaucracies and budget cuts and dealing with the frustrating timetables of Corps of Engineers studies is not something 99 percent of hunters and fishermen want to consider. They’d rather rig rods and reels and gas up boats, toss out decoy spreads and spend time with buddies and family on the water.

Reality is, though, if they want great places to hunt and fish along the Mississippi River and want invasive fish and vegetation controlled and, maybe, a well-maintained boat launch here and there, dealing with studies and budgets and state and federal agencies is part of the process.

Thankfully, there are a few elected officials in Washington willing to make the priorities of hunters and anglers throughout the Lower Mississippi River their priorities as well.

Top photo courtesy The Nature Conservancy

(Note: This story originally appeared in the January 2026 issue of Louisiana Sportsman.)

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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.”

January 13, 2026

In the Arena: Marcus Hockett

TRCP’s “In the Arena” series highlights the individual voices of hunters and anglers who, as Theodore Roosevelt so famously said, strive valiantly in the worthy cause of conservation.

Marcus Hockett

Hometown: Dillon, MT
Occupation: Field Producer for
Fresh Tracks with Randy Newberg
Conservation credentials: 
Hockett’s B.S. in Fish and Wildlife Management and experience in the field as a research technician working with wildlife biologists combined with his background and passion for the outdoors make him an ideal advocate for public lands, hunting, and fishing.

Hockett has hunted across the West, filmed hunts from above the Arctic Circle to the deserts of the Southwest, and has already spent more nights sleeping on public lands than most hunters twice his age. His commitment to conservation and excellent communications skills (he has an M.F.A. in Science and Natural History Filmmaking) have helped solidify the Fresh Tracks brand not only as an entertaining hunting show, but as a trusted source for information on the conservation issues impacting America’s hunters and anglers.

Here is his story.

TRCP: How were you introduced to hunting, fishing, and the outdoors? Who introduced you? 

Marcus Hockett: My parents made sure I was immersed in the outdoors, and my dad took me hunting every chance he got. We were lucky to live in an area with public land and plenty of hunting and fishing opportunities, so I’ve been able to recreate and explore in some amazing places my entire life.

Hockett with a public land, September bull.

TRCP: Tell us about one of your most memorable outdoor adventures. 

Marcus Hockett: While working for Montana State University as a research technician, I was with a group deep in the backcountry doing surveys for mountain goats and bighorn sheep. One survey in particular stands out when we were perched on top of a mountain looking over a massive view-shed (the view of an area from a specific vantage point).

Our job was to systematically glass and precisely pinpoint the location of sheep and goats on a map. During the survey we had a goat right below us, a group of bighorn rams fed on a bench down below, beyond the rams were two herds of elk with rutting bulls going crazy, off to the side a pack of wolves were bedded near a kill, and at the kill a grizzly with three cubs cleaned up the scraps. This scene unfolded over an hour or so as we watched in pure silence.

We weren’t supposed to talk to one another during the surveys to assess detection probabilities, which is when one surveyor saw an animal that the others did not. However, one of the grad students I was working for eventually broke when a big boar grizzly chased off the sow and cubs and he blurted out “Are you seeing this?!”

We all replied with “Yeah, this is insane!”

That survey stuck in my mind as an example of a landscape that was truly wild and untouched. Being able to sit there in silence and soak it all in just made the memory that much clearer.

TRCP: If you could hunt or fish anywhere, where would it be and why?

Marcus Hockett: Wild sheep. Anywhere they live. I’ve been extremely lucky to be able to hunt them twice and film a handful of other hunts. I may never get to hunt them again, but being up where sheep live and trying to find a mature ram forces you to be in spots you would never otherwise be.

It bothers me a bit that my answer is wild sheep because hunting them is simply unattainable for most people. It’s either cost prohibitive or you have to win the hunting lottery to chase them, but the landscapes and habitat that support them are some of the most scenic, awe-inspiring areas in the world.

A big smile before a long pack out after a successful sheep hunt.

TRCP: How does conservation help enhance your outdoor life? 

Marcus Hockett: It’s a way of protecting and maintaining my favorite things in life. Nearly all of my recreation involves public land or water, and if those lands or waters are degraded, so is the experience.

Working on a juniper removal project will enhance habitat for mule deer that I might eventually hunt. Advocating for conservation funding to support an easement on private land can prevent land from being subdivided and developed, keeping winter range intact for elk that I might eventually hunt.

There are a lot of ways folks can be involved.

Hockett with a handful of wild chukar.

TRCP: What are the major conservation challenges where you live?

Marcus Hockett: In my opinion, habitat. Wildlife needs a home, they need something to eat and drink. It’s challenging because everyone wants a piece of the pie and the pie is usually shrinking. Whether it’s for development, resource extraction, etc. It’s tough to keep the habitat we have and tough to restore it after it’s been degraded. There are a lot of competing interests for land and resources, so convincing people to value wildlife and natural habitats more than the alternatives can be a real challenge.

TRCP: Why is it important to you to be involved in conservation? 

Marcus Hockett: Well there’s the selfish reason for protecting my favorite things so I can continue to go outside and enjoy those things… but I also recognize that a lot of people benefit from public land and it’s worthwhile to conserve wildlife and their habitat so future generations can enjoy them. Plus, it’s just nice to know that there are natural places that haven’t been heavily altered by man.

It can be hard to be optimistic at times, but there is always something we can make progress on. Where progress is made depends on which politicians, land managers, and wildlife managers are leading, but there is always something that can be done.

Hockett with a Yellowstone Cutthroat to be excited about.

TRCP: Why should conservation matter to the next generation of hunters and anglers?

Marcus Hockett: So people can continue to enjoy the things they love. I think a lot of people care about wild things and wild places but don’t realize how threatened they actually are. All too often we hear about how much better things used to be “back in the day.” It’s not easy, but if enough people care about conservation, it is possible to make things better in the future.

Photo credit: Marcus Hockett


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.

December 29, 2025

In the Arena: Zack Williams

TRCP’s “In the Arena” series highlights the individual voices of hunters and anglers who, as Theodore Roosevelt so famously said, strive valiantly in the worthy cause of conservation.

Zack Williams

Hometown: Missoula, MT
Occupation: Editorial and Brand Manager for Backcountry Hunters & Anglers
Conservation credentials: A lifelong angler and hunter, Williams has been a steelhead guide in the Pacific Northwest and is the founding editor of
Swing the Fly. Williams used this expertise and passion for conservation to find a job working in the hunt-fish nonprofit space.

Zack Williams garnered his maniacal angling mindset from a childhood in the water-logged state of Michigan. This fanatic pursuit received a steroid shot to the arm when he found the steelhead rivers of the Pacific Northwest and took a foray down the Andes chasing trout. Now Williams has settled in Montana and scrambles through hellholes looking for elk and mule deer when he’s not standing up for public lands and hunter and angler access in his role at Backcountry Hunters & Anglers.

Here is his story.

TRCP: How were you introduced to hunting, fishing, and the outdoors? Who introduced you? 

Zack Williams: I was fortunate. My dad had me waiving around a fly rod at the age of two. By the time I was five he was taking me smallmouth fishing on our local Michigan river upwards of five nights a week. When I wanted to start bowhunting at 12, he picked it up with me. I owe him a tremendous debt of gratitude – and my mom as well for allowing us to disappear at will to fish and hunt.

Williams happy before a long, dark packout.

TRCP: Tell us about one of your most memorable outdoor adventures. 

Zack Williams: Being a weekend warrior these days, I cherish the memories of extended periods spent detached from the hustle of modern life. A few cherry examples are four months in Argentina chasing trout down the length of the Andes in my 20s; two summers spent living out of a tiny camper from Oregon’s North Umpqua River to Michigan up to Jasper, Canada, and across the West with my wife, two large dogs and a cat; a fall and winter spent living in a tiny backpacking tent with my dog chasing steelhead across the Northwest. I look forward to future opportunities to detach like that again, hopefully with my wife and daughter if they’re interested.

TRCP: If you could hunt or fish anywhere, where would it be and why?

Zack Williams: I’m always curious about what lies over the next ridge. Rather than dream of faraway lands, I think I’d choose somewhere I’ve never explored here in Montana, free of roads and with lots of downed trees, nasty November weather and minimal people, to chase elk or mule deer.

The gift of a PNW steelhead.

TRCP: How does conservation help enhance your outdoor life? 

Zack Williams: Everything I value, outside of family, can be directly traced to wild public lands and clean, cold water. Conserving those is everything to me.

TRCP: What are the major conservation challenges where you live?

Zack Williams: There are a lot of important issues at the forefront right now, but for me, number one is saving the Roadless Rule. So many of the quality experiences – and so much of the quality wildlife habitat – we have are dependent on having roadless tracts of public land. Beyond that, fiscally, it just doesn’t make sense to build more roads when we don’t have the funding to maintain the ones we have. There’s a lot of misunderstanding concerning the Roadless Rule – what it does and what it doesn’t do. I hope hunters, anglers and policymakers will take the time to understand the facts about it before the next comment period in the spring of 2026.

Williams and his daughter, Cora, with a Westslope cutthroat.

TRCP: Why is it important to you to be involved in conservation? 

Zack Williams: I have a young daughter and would like her to have the chance to experience wild public lands and waters like I have. Beyond that, it just feels like the right thing to do.

TRCP: Why should conservation matter to the next generation of hunters and anglers?

Zack Williams: Once these places are gone, they aren’t coming back. As the man TR himself said in my favorite part from the Man in the Arena speech: “Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by failure, than to take rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy much nor suffer much, because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat.”

Apathy is not an option these days when it comes to conservation – and a whole lot of other things it seems. I don’t think we have a choice unless we’re OK with seeing it all go away. Maybe it’s always been that way, but to me it feels like we’re at a very critical moment for public lands and waters. We need a new generation of leaders to stand up like those before us did.

Photo credit: Zack Williams


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.

December 23, 2025

The Tongass Assessment Report Balances the Needs of Hunters, Anglers, and Other Users

TRCP commends the Forest Service for its emphasis on assuring healthy fish and wildlife habitat and ensuring continued access and recreation opportunities for local and visiting hunters and anglers

The Forest Service recently released the Tongass National Forest Plan Assessment Report, which highlights the agency’s focus on strong watershed conservation for salmon, deer habitat restoration through science-based forestry, reliable access for traditional and recreational use, and continued collaboration with Tribes, local communities, and conservation partners. TRCP commends the Forest Service for its emphasis on assuring healthy fish and wildlife habitat and ensuring continued access and recreation opportunities for local and visiting hunters and anglers.

“The overarching vision for the Tongass, as shown by the public feedback results, is that it remains a healthy ecosystem,” the Forest Service writes. “When viewed as an entire 17-million-acre region, the Tongass National Forest has retained natural ecosystem processes to a degree far greater than most National Forests in the Lower 48 states. There have not been wholesale changes in natural processes in Southeast Alaska, and it is one of the last places where natural salmon runs thrive.”

The report is one of the first steps in revising the Tongass Land and Resource Management Plan (also called the Forest Management Plan). The plan highlights priorities to guide the next chapter in managing America’s largest and wildest national forest.

Big forest, big salmon, big smiles.

Big, Wet, and Wild

The Tongass National Forest, encompassing most of Southeast Alaska, is what locals call a working forest. Roughly 72,000 people live in 32 communities within the Forest’s boundaries. Salmon are the backbone of the region’s ecosystem. All five species of Pacific salmon spawn in the Tongass’s 3,000 plus streams, and these fish provide the foundation for many of the region’s economic opportunities, supporting commercial fishing, tourism, and the hunting and fishing lifestyle. Around 2.3 million visitors come to the Tongass each year to experience the scenery and outdoor opportunities, which are all tied to a well-functioning ecosystem.

Locals live alongside some of the wildest and most intact lands in America. The forest supports a robust population of Sitka blacktail deer, mountain goats, and brown and black bears. Southeast Alaska’s remaining old growth forests are key to the health of salmon streams and winter habitat for deer and goats that support hunting and fishing.

In this assessment, the Forest Service is focused on adaptive management to meet the challenges of a variety of environmental changes, like expected increases in temperature, rainfall, flooding, and landslides that will affect fish habitat, deer populations, and access routes.

Exciting Changes

The Tongass has reached a pivotal moment of its management where millions of acres of young growth forest are now ready for commercial harvest that could also restore wildlife habitat. The Forest Service’s report makes it clear that Tribes and Alaska Native Corporations have requested this approach to forest management. Other public input has also supported young growth timber harvests that improve browse habitat and support local sawmills. While salmon stream restoration work has been conducted for the last few decades with positive results, the focus on forest restoration to benefit deer and other wildlife is more recent. Restoration is building momentum, creating jobs, and is something locals and visiting outdoorsmen and women are excited to see enacted.

Young growth timber harvests can improve browse habitat for Sitka blacktails and support local sawmills.

Maintain Existing Roads

The Tongass has thousands of miles of existing roads. The budget for road maintenance is underfunded, and many roaded areas lack maintained access. The report highlights the importance of maintaining and repairing roads, trails, docks, and campsites for access to hunting and fishing grounds. The monitoring of road culverts is also important to prevent fish blockages, and surveying aquatic species and habitat restoration is important to sustain the ecosystems that hunters and anglers rely on.

The report notes that road construction, as well as mining and tourism growth, all carry risks for aquatic habitat if not managed carefully. The revised plan could strengthen standards and guidelines to conserve fish-bearing streams and surface resources.

A Path to a Positive Future Depends on All of Us

It’s no easy task to balance different users’ interests, but the Forest Service’s report shows that the agency is invested in a strong, working future for Southeast Alaska. It’ll be an exciting future for America’s largest national forest if the report’s priorities are adopted into the revised Tongass Forest Management Plan. To ensure this result, it is even more important that the hunting and fishing community stay engaged. There will be more public comment periods as revisions continue.

Photo Credit: Bjorn Dihle

HOW YOU CAN HELP

TRCP has partnered with Afuera Coffee Co. to further our commitment to conservation. $4 from each bag is donated to the TRCP, to help continue our efforts of safeguarding critical habitats, productive hunting grounds, and favorite fishing holes for future generations.

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