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Your Kid’s Favorite Book Is Making the Case for Wildlife Crossings

A coyote slips under a bridge in a children's book — and it's making the case for one of the smartest conservation investments in America. Here's why hunters and anglers should pay attention.

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March 5, 2026

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New Farm Bill Advances in House Committee: Key Impacts for Hunters and Anglers

The House Agriculture Committee has advanced the Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026, launching the next phase of negotiations over conservation programs that will impact wildlife habitat and hunting and fishing access.

It’s been nearly two years since we had a Farm Bill proposal to evaluate, but that changed on February 13, when House Ag Committee Chairman G.T. Thompson introduced the Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026. A lot has happened in agricultural conservation policy since the 2018 Farm Bill. Key programs have been extended and received major funding boosts, first through the Inflation Reduction Act and then made permanent in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. But without a Farm Bill, there has been no opportunity to improve the underlaying structure that makes these programs work. 

On March 4, the House Ag Committee debated this bill, proposed amendments, and ultimately advanced it to the House floor on a 34-17 vote. Given the importance of the Farm Bill to hunters and anglers—and the difficulty of moving legislation of this scale—we are encouraged to have a bill to review and formal committee action toward passing it.

Before we summarize the key provisions of this bill, there are a few important dynamics to keep in mind.

With tight margins in both the House and Senate, bipartisanship will be essential. Although this bill could have advanced through Committee on a party-line vote, passing a fully partisan on the House floor would be highly unlikely. Nearly 30% of Ag Committee Democrats voted to advance this bill, indicating substantive bipartisan support. However, major sticking points remain, including earlier changes within the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, policy around pesticide labeling, and state authority to regulate swine production. These issues fall outside of TRCP’s primary focus, but they will influence whether conservation priorities ultimately advance. 

Work on this Farm Bill began as soon as, or even before, the 2018 bill was signed. Although six or seven years seems like ample time to resolve differences, significant negotiations remain. This markup, and advancing the bill out of committee, is an important step, but further debate will occur as the bill moves to the House floor. In the Senate, Agriculture Committee Chairman John Boozman (R-Ark.) and Ranking Member Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) are working on their own proposal. As a result, this means that any individual provision in Chairman Thompson’s bill has additional hurdles to clear, and elements are likely to change.

Extended Farm Bill negotiations are not new, but after more than seven years without a comprehensive bill—and with bipartisan legislation increasingly difficult to move—Congress is fast approaching uncharted waters. At the same time, the Conservation Title is in better shape than usual. Investments in Title II programs through budget reconciliation packages in 2022 and 2025 extended most USDA conservation programs through 2031 and strengthened their long-term funding, providing some stability as Congress debates program changes. However, reconciliation rules allow funding adjustments but not policy reforms, meaning updates to conservation programs are still needed. Additionally, because the Conservation Reserve Program is limited by acreage rather than funding, CRP did not receive a funding increase or long-term reauthorization through reconciliation.

Policy and funding changes in this Farm Bill will impact fish and wildlife habitat and hunting and fishing access for the next five years and beyond. You can find explanations about how Farm Bill programs support hunters and anglers here. 

Keeping these dynamics in mind, what exactly is in this bill?  Farm Bills cover a wide range of issues—from nutrition assistance and agricultural research to trade, risk management, and livestock disease—so a comprehensive analysis of the entire 800-page bill is beyond the scope of this blog. Instead, we focus on several provisions most likely to affect habitat and access for hunters and anglers. Let’s dig in. 

Key Conservation Provisions in The Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026 would: 

This bill has been informally called “Farm Bill 2.0”, in recognition that many priorities were accomplished through the budget reconciliation process last summer. As part of that package, Congress made the remaining conservation funding from the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act permanent. This represented a major investment in Title II programs and shifted the balance among several programs, particularly the Regional Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP) and the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP). However, Chairman Thompson’s team has consistently stated their intention to reallocate those resources to support policy improvements and new programs in this Farm Bill. Priority programs differ among members of the hunting and fishing community—and even more among the broader ag conservation community— but TRCP’s priority throughout this process has been ensuring that conservation funding remains conservation funding, and this bill meets that criterion. 

Chairman Thompson’s 2024 bill included major changes to the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP), some of which were clearly beneficial to habitat and others potentially problematic. This time CRP is simply reauthorized for five years. This puts the program back on the same reauthorization schedule as the rest of Title II and avoids complications associated with repeated expirations and extensions. However, it is also a missed opportunity to make needed improvements to the program. Ideally, the bill would increase payment limitations, restore cost share for mid-contract management, and remove rental rate limitations, among other improvements. Still, leaving CRP largely unchanged gives the Senate significant latitude to pursue these updates, many of which have already been proposed in the bipartisan CRP Improvement and Flexibility Act. Congressman Jim Costa (D-Calif.) offered an amendment reflecting this legislation with support from Representatives Dusty Johnson (R-S.D.), Sharice Davids (D-Kan.), and Randy Feenstra (R-Iowa), but it was withdrawn after the Chairman committed to continuing work toward solutions.

This bill would have substantial impacts on conservation easement programs. One of the most significant is the creation of a new Forest Conservation Easement Program with mandatory funding filling a gap in current easement opportunities and supporting working forest conservation. The bill also makes several adjustments that expand management opportunities on new and existing wetland easements, helping ensure these wetlands continue to provide quality habitat for generations.  

The Regional Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP) has tremendous potential to deliver conservation in innovative, partnership-driven ways, but the program has long been hampered by barriers that frustrated partners and limited its impact.  Chairman Thompson’s bill returns the RCPP to an earlier structure, that more closely connects projects to “covered programs” like EQIP.  It also aims to shorten approval timelines and reimburse partner administrative expenses. While the covered program model has both advantages and drawbacks, efforts to streamline the RCPP are welcome, as is the addition of wildlife corridors and habitat connectivity to the program’s purposes. 

In addition to the language within RCPP, the bill encourages the Secretary of Agriculture to “encourage the use of conservation practices that support the development, restoration, and maintenance of habitat connectivity and wildlife corridors” in all conservation programs. The impact of this provision will vary depending on the priorities of any given Secretary but given the importance of corridors for species like Western big game, the direction is encouraging.  

During the markup itself, Congressman Gabe Vasquez (D-NM), offered an amendment based on the Habitat Connectivity on Working Lands Act he is leading with Congressman Ryan Zinke (R-Mont.). The amendment includes several provisions supporting migration corridors and habitat connectivity. One of the most significant aims to codify the USDA’s ability to use EQIP or the Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP) on the same acres, but for different purposes, as Grassland CRP. This approach – often referred to as a “program stack,” where multiple conservation programs can be used together on the same acreage – is a key component of the Migratory Big Game Initiative, which has proven successful in Wyoming and elsewhere. The amendment was adopted by voice vote and generated positive comments from members of both parties including Chairman Thompson and Congressman Frank Lucas (R-OK). It was also great to hear Ranking Member Craig comment on the importance of “developing conservation programs with an eye toward restoring wildlife habitat and habitat connectivity.” 

Chairman Thompson has long been an advocate for the Voluntary Public Access and Habitat Incentive Program (VPA-HIP). In 2024, the committee tried to include $150 million for the program, a funding level called for by the Voluntary Public Access Improvement Act and dozens of conservation organizations. However, this current bill does not include funding for VPA-HIP. Fortunately, thanks in large part to Chairman Thompson’s efforts, VPA-HIP received $70 million over seven years in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act last summer. While important, that funding level is unlikely to expand the program’s impact.  

The bill provides several new tools aimed at improving forest health and watershed function, with benefits for water quality, fish and wildlife, and resilience to wildfire and drought. Notable provisions include reauthorization of the U.S. Forest Service’s Water Source Protection Program, expanded use of good neighbor agreements, and additional improvements to watershed health and drinking water sources within the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Program. 

While proactively addressing wildfire risk is important, the bill also includes provisions that could limit the U.S. Forest Service’s ability to manage wildfire effectively. These include requirements to suppress certain fires within 24 hours of detection and additional limitations on prescribed fire. Although these provisions apply only in certain areas and conditions, relying primarily on suppression has not historically been an effective wildfire strategy, and experienced land management professionals are better equipped than Congress to make these decisions.  

There are many other provisions in this bill that we will continue to follow, and there is still a long road before its impacts are felt on the ground. The TRCP thanks both House and Senate Agriculture Committee leadership for their work toward a bipartisan Farm Bill that supports habitat and access. 


The Hunter & Angler’s Guide to the Farm Bill

We know it can be challenging to break through the alphabet soup of program acronyms to understand why the reauthorization and improvement of Farm Bill conservation programs is a top priority. In The Hunter & Anglers Guide to the Farm Bill, we demystify the Farm Bill and the crucial conservations programs that sportsmen and women should care about.

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February 27, 2026

In the Arena: Josh Warren

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.

Josh Warren

Hometown: Ashland, OR
Occupation:
Director of Marketing for WorkSharp 
Conservation credentials: 
Warren is is an Oregon hunter and angler who values public lands and the North American Model of Conservation. Through his role at WorkSharp, he helps support conservation partnerships that sustain wildlife, habitat, and opportunity for future generations.

For many hunters and anglers, the connection to conservation begins close to home — in the woods behind the house, along a familiar stretch of river, or through time spent learning from mentors and family. That sense of place is something Joshua Warren carries with him, both personally and professionally. As Director of Marketing at WorkSharp, Josh represents a company rooted in Ashland, Oregon, a community defined by its access to public lands and wild country.

Here is his story.

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

Josh Warren: I was introduced to the outdoors at a young age, and it shaped much of who I am today. Time outside wasn’t just recreation — it was where I learned patience, responsibility, and respect for wild places. That perspective carries directly into my work at Work Sharp. We’ve proudly rooted our company in Ashland, Oregon because of its natural beauty and access to public lands. For decades, we’ve built tools for hunters and anglers, and one of the most rewarding parts of what we do is watching someone experience that spark for the first time — whether it’s chasing their first elk, landing a salmon, or simply spending meaningful time outside. 

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

Josh Warren: One of the experiences I look forward to every year is FishCamp. We bring together a small group of men and women from across the outdoor community and gather along the Columbia River during the fall salmon run. It’s an intimate setting — long days on the water, evenings around the campfire, stories shared, and genuine connections made. FishCamp grounds us. It reminds us why we do what we do — building tools that help people make memories in wild places and supporting conservation efforts that ensure those opportunities remain for the next generation. 

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

Josh Warren: While there are many places around the country and around the world that are fascinating, adventurous and unknown, there is something special about hunting the woods behind your house, your local unit, or the river on the edge of town. It harkens back to the original reason people hunted and fished: survival. Going back to the roots of hunting the same woods, fishing the same rivers and streams means something. It’s not about Instagram, it’s not about trophies — it’s doing it because we love it, even in its most mundane form. 

TRCP: How does conservation help enhance your outdoor life? 

Josh Warren: It feels cliché to say that we’re protecting something for generations to come, but I can certainly recognize that if we hadn’t made decisions years ago about protecting wild lands, I wouldn’t have the same opportunities today that I do. I recognize the power we have just by existing in this time to protect lands and species that would be immensely harder to recover and protect in the future. Many of my favorite memories come from places that are protected through wilderness designations, roadless regions, or simply the fact that in Oregon we can hunt a wide variety of species because they still exist. Rocky Mountain elk in Northeast Oregon are a prime example of old conservation work that has benefited me and my family over the years. 

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

Josh Warren: It’s complex, and in many ways our specific region, Southwest Oregon, has benefited from strong belief in conservation. But there are still challenges. It could be controversial, but I think one challenge is education for people, specifically non-hunters, to understand how our model of conservation is funded. Oregon faces threats of anti-hunting laws regularly. Hunting and fishing licenses and tags directly support the conservation of the species we hunt and the public lands we maintain. The model of conservation works as well as any through history, and that continues to be new information to many people who oppose hunting and fishing. 

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

Josh Warren: We have significantly more power to preserve and conserve now than we will at any point in the future. We must do what we can as early as we can. 

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

Josh Warren: Ultimately, the next generation needs to decide if they value conservation for themselves. I believe there is value in living life hands on — pushing back against the rapid evolution of technology and convenience and pursuing a life where we count on our own two hands. Hunting and angling are incredibly grounding and are one of the ultimate expressions of living life hands on. I believe that’s good for people and for humanity. 

Photo credit: Josh Warren


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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February 25, 2026

Beyond State Lines: Uniting Sportsmen and Women Across the Rio Grande

A West Texas convening brought hunters, anglers, and Rio Grande Basin stakeholders together to confront water challenges and advance collaborative solutions across the Basin.

In the Rio Grande Basin, water is more than a resource; it is the lifeblood of trout streams, desert springs, working lands, and the wetlands where waterfowl gather each fall. From the headwaters in Colorado to the deserts of New Mexico and Texas, the Rio Grande and its tributaries sustain wildlife, rural communities, economies, and the hunting and fishing traditions that connect generations of Americans to the outdoors. Managing this river responsibly requires cooperation across state lines, sound science, and a shared commitment to stewardship. That’s why the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership is working to unite sportsmen and women, landowners, scientists, and policymakers around practical solutions that ensure the Rio Grande remains a place where fish and wildlife thrive and outdoor traditions endure.

Last month in Alpine, Texas, more than 300 landowners, scientists, water managers, policymakers, and conservation leaders gathered at Sul Ross State University for the Water in the Desert Conference. Partners including the Rio Grande Joint Venture, American Bird Conservancy, The Nature Conservancy, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, and the Texas Wildlife Association joined the conversation, alongside local stakeholders from across the basin. The focus was simple but urgent: roll up our sleeves and advance practical, science-driven solutions to the water challenges shaping the future of the Rio Grande. For hunters and anglers, these discussions aren’t abstract policy debates – they help determine whether trout streams keep flowing, wetlands support migrating birds, and wildlife habitat remains strong across the basin.  

Throughout the conference, one theme surfaced again and again: management of the Rio Grande cannot continue on its current path. Keynote speaker and freshwater researcher Brian Richter cautioned about a main challenge in the region: water is being withdrawn faster than nature can replace it. This is putting the Rio Grande on an unsustainable path that risks reducing flows for communities, agriculture, and wildlife alike. This message underscored what hunters and anglers already know: declining water supplies mean shrinking wetlands, stressed fisheries, and degraded habitat for the species we care about. 

Encouragingly, some real progress is already underway in the lower Rio Grande Basin. Speakers highlighted strong partnerships, innovative research, and practical policy solutions aimed at addressing water scarcity and building long-term resilience in the basin. Steps to increase watershed health and adaptive capacity are being taken through stream restoration projects reconnecting floodplains and improving fish habitat, establishment of new water funding tools, and research focused on protecting springs and sustaining critical aquatic ecosystems.  

The week concluded with field sessions including visits to springs, rangelands, and active restoration sites that gave participants a firsthand look at West Texas land and water management in action. These site visits showcased how spring protection, riparian restoration, and collaborative watershed projects can enhance trout and warmwater fisheries, improve water sources for wildlife, and strengthen habitats across the basin. Throughout the basin, tangible steps are being taken that benefit fish, wildlife, and the sporting community today. 

By improving coordination across state lines, fortifying water data and science, and encouraging collaborative management, leaders across the Rio Grande Basin are helping to lay the groundwork for healthier rivers, springs, and wetlands—places where trout rise, waterfowl gather, and wildlife thrives. That matters deeply to hunters and anglers across Colorado, New Mexico, and Texas because fish and wildlife don’t recognize state lines, and neither should our commitment to conserving them. 

U.S. Representative Tony Gonzales, a member of the Congressional Sportsmen’s Caucus, closed the conference by emphasizing the importance of teamwork in tackling the region’s water challenges. His message reinforced an important fact: conserving the Rio Grande requires collaboration at every level, including Washington D.C. The TRCP looks forward to continuing to work with leaders on both sides of the aisle to elevate Rio Grande Basin priorities at the federal level. 

Safeguarding the Rio Grande will take all of us, and the TRCP is committed to ensuring hunters and anglers have a seat at the table to ensure that water management decisions across the Rio Grande Basin reflect the needs of fish, wildlife, and the people who pursue them. As TRCP’s Rio Grande Program Manager, I was proud to represent the hunting and angling community in these conversations, and to help ensure that the future of the Rio Grande includes healthy habitat and strong sporting traditions for generations to come.  

Learn more about TRCP’s commitment to habitat and clean water HERE

Top photo credit: NPS Photo/Jennette Jurado


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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February 20, 2026

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.



At the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership, that idea is not a slogan. It is a responsibility. 

Hunters and anglers know conservation is not abstract. It is a duck blind at sunrise, a bull elk crossing a high ridge, a trout rising in clean, cold water. It is also the rare chance to hunt, fish, and travel through landscapes where solitude is still possible—where distance, quiet, and undeveloped character shape the experience itself. 

We believe in the wise use of natural resources. Responsible development strengthens communities and supports our economy and quality of life. But we also recognize that some landscapes are so ecologically intact, and so vital to fish, wildlife, and outdoor experiences, that their highest and best use is long-term stewardship. 

Not every place meets that threshold and TRCP is judicious in where we engage. But where intact watersheds, big game habitat, resilient fisheries, and recreation depend on stability at scale—and where there is broad agreement among hunters and anglers—conservation is not symbolic. It is practical. It is how opportunity endures. 

This is why TRCP works to conserve America’s special places. This principle guides our work from Alaska to Florida and in places like the Boundary Waters and the Brooks Range. 

Photo: Theodore Roosevelt Collection Harvard College Library

President Theodore Roosevelt believed conservation and prosperity belonged together. He hunted, he ranched, he fished, and he understood that wildlife abundance depends on intact habitat and clean water.  

As T.R. wrote, “Conservation means development as much as it does protection.” Stewardship meant ensuring natural resources endure, productive and accessible, for generations to come. Yet Roosevelt also believed that some special places, by their very character, warranted enduring stewardship. That dual commitment of wise use and careful restraint where necessary, continues to guide TRCP’s work today. 

Recently, Theodore Roosevelt’s direct descendants sent a letter to U.S. Senators urging them to uphold that legacy by protecting the Boundary Waters. They reminded lawmakers that Roosevelt worked “exceedingly hard to protect Minnesota’s forests and water,” emphasizing that safeguarding extraordinary landscapes reflects foresight, responsibility, and bipartisan leadership. 

Their appeal was not nostalgic. It was a call to carry forward a distinctly American tradition of stewardship—recognizing that when certain waters, wildlife habitats, and public lands are placed at risk, leaders have a duty to act with the long view in mind. 

For hunters and anglers, that long view is simple: intact habitat today means opportunity tomorrow. 

Photo: Glen Eberle

For hunters and anglers, special places are not abstract. They are the source of opportunity. 

They are the cold headwaters that sustain trout. The migratory habitats that carry elk and mule deer across vast landscapes. The intact watersheds that support wild salmon and thriving waterfowl. They are also landscapes where Americans can escape the noise of everyday life and immerse themselves in nature – experiences afield that are increasingly rare and important in a busy world. 

When systems are altered in ways that cannot be easily reversed, the impacts are not theoretical – they show up directly in fewer fish, displaced herds, and diminished experiences. When habitat fragments or water quality declines, opportunity declines with it. 

This is why TRCP engages selectively and strategically in conserving nationally significant landscapes where habitat is irreplaceable and long-term sporting opportunity depends on stewardship. 

When we step into the arena, we intend to make it count. 

Photo: Josh Metten

For more than two decades, TRCP has worked alongside hunters, anglers, landowners, and elected leaders from both parties to conserve landscapes that define American sporting opportunities. 

In Wyoming’s Wyoming Range, we helped secure the withdrawal of 1.2 million acres of the Bridger-Teton National Forest from mineral entry, safeguarding critical habitat for one of North America’s most important mule deer herds. In Montana’s Rocky Mountain Front, we supported efforts to maintain the integrity of a landscape long valued for elk, native trout, and backcountry access. In Alaska’s Bristol Bay, we mobilized sportsmen and women to help sustain one of the world’s most productive wild salmon fisheries. 

These efforts were not about opposing development everywhere. TRCP supports responsible development projects needed to benefit our economy, protect national security, and advance the interests of the United States, and we will work with decisionmakers and businesses to advance sensible projects. But certain landscapes—because of their ecological integrity, sporting value, and national significance, including the significant economic contributions they make through outdoor recreation and conservation investments —warrant durable safeguards.  

That same principle guides our engagement in Alaska’s Brooks Range, one of North America’s last largely intact hunting and fishing landscapes. The very qualities that hunters and anglers value the most about the Brooks Range—the unbroken expansiveness, the lack of human activity, the unmatched solitude—are simply incompatible with a major industrial access corridor.

Across administrations and political shifts, TRCP has approached this work steadily and pragmatically, grounded in science and focused on lasting outcomes for fish, wildlife, and the sporting community. 

Photo: Sportsmen for the Boundary Waters

The Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness and the surrounding Rainy River watershed form one of the most intact freshwater systems in the country. These cold, connected waters sustain lake trout, walleye, and smallmouth bass, while the broader landscape supports moose, deer, and waterfowl—and it is all linked by more than 1,100 lakes and historic portage trails that allow people to experience this wildlife-rich landscape by canoe.  

TRCP has engaged in this region with that responsibility in mind. In 2023, we joined several of our partners in celebrating the 20-year mineral withdrawal in the Rainy River watershed because of its national significance to hunting and fishing and the long-term risks sulfide-ore copper mining poses in such an interconnected system. 

Our position has remained consistent: where development presents a high likelihood of irreversible harm to fisheries, recreation, and wildlife habitat—and where sporting interests broadly agree that conservation is needed – long-term stewardship is the prudent course.

The recent letter from Roosevelt’s descendants reinforces that tradition of foresight and bipartisan responsibility. Safeguarding places like the Boundary Waters reflects a continuation of America’s conservation ethic. 

For hunters and anglers who believe stewardship requires participation, speaking up is part of that responsibility.  

Take action through the Sportsmen for the Boundary Waters alert: Senate Resolution : Sportsmen for the Boundary Waters 


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. 

Click here to sign up today.

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.

Learn More

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