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In the Spotlight

In the Arena: Remembering Ted Turner 

Remembering a sportsman and media mogul who stepped into the arena for conservation — and whose conservation legacy touched millions of acres and millions of lives.

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May 7, 2026

In the Arena: Remembering Ted Turner 

Remembering a sportsman and media mogul who stepped into the arena for conservation – and whose conservation legacy touched millions of acres and millions of lives.

The conservation community lost one of its most consequential champions this week with the passing of Ted Turner – a founding supporter of the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership whose belief in this organization helped make it possible. While the world knew him as the media mogul who built CNN and reshaped how Americans consume news, those of us in the hunting and fishing community knew him as something else entirely: a fierce, tireless, and deeply personal defender of the American land.

Ted Turner didn’t approach conservation as a hobby or a public relations exercise. He lived it. As Todd Wilkinson chronicled in Last Stand: Ted Turner’s Quest to Save a Troubled Planet, Turner’s journey from outspoken media titan to eco-capitalist began the way it does for so many of us, with a few recreational retreats, a fly rod, and the hope of chasing elk and birds. “But the more that you become familiar with the land at river level, and contemplate all of the things that go into creating a healthy trout stream, your thinking naturally expands,” Turner reflected. “Then it’s your choice to act on it, or not.” He acted on it — decisively, generously, and at a scale few private citizens have ever matched.

Through the Turner Foundation, he extended that same commitment beyond his property lines – directing significant resources toward improving water quality, safeguarding wildlife habitat, and working to build a more sustainable future. And he did it with the rare understanding that conservation cannot succeed if it speaks only to one side of the aisle.

That instinct brought him to TRCP.

When the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership was taking shape in the early 2000s, Ted and his son Beau didn’t just offer their enthusiastic support – they helped TRCP get off the ground. The Turner Foundation recognized what TRCP represented: a voice for the roughly 54 million Americans who hunt and fish — a constituency whose numbers were vast, whose conservation commitment was real, and whose influence in the policy arena was largely untapped. Ted understood that protecting habitat, clean water, and wild places was not a partisan cause. It was a shared one.

In 2013, TRCP honored Turner with its Lifetime Conservation Achievement Award, the same year Last Stand introduced his conservation story to a wider audience. Those who knew him understood that for Ted Turner, the award was beside the point. What mattered was the work – the lands restored, the wildlife returned, the coalition-minded conservation work he helped make possible. Theodore Roosevelt believed conservation was a matter of national character. Ted Turner lived that belief.

TRCP extends its deepest condolences to his family, friends, and the countless individuals and communities who were inspired by his example and commitment to conservation.

Top photo: Linda Best, Bozeman Daily

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April 23, 2026

Thompson, Vasquez, and onX’s Siegfried and Orvidas Receive TRCP’s Conservation Awards

Gala event hosted by MeatEater’s Steven Rinella brought together D.C. luminaries, outdoor industry leaders, and TRCP supporters

At its 18th annual Capital Conservation Awards Dinner, the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership honored a Republican congressman, a Democratic congressman, and a technology company – united by a shared commitment to conservation. Representative Glenn “GT” Thompson (R-Pa.), Representative Gabe Vasquez (D-N.M.), and Eric Siegfried and Laura Orvidas of onX were recognized for conservation achievements that reflect the breadth and durability of TRCP’s mission to guarantee all Americans quality places to hunt and fish.

The gala event was hosted by Steven Rinella, founder of MeatEater and TRCP board member, at the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C. The evening brought together more than 500 conservation advocates, policymakers, and outdoor industry leaders for TRCP’s marquee annual event.   

The evening also featured remarks from special guest Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum, who spoke on the importance of hunters and anglers to conservation, Theodore Roosevelt’s enduring legacy, and the recently re-established Hunting and Shooting Sports Conservation and Access Council and Make America Beautiful Again commission

“We are thrilled to be presenting our 2026 awards to four leaders who, in the spirit of Theodore Roosevelt, strive valiantly in the worthy cause of conservation,” said Matt Cook, TRCP CEO and board chair. “Representatives Thompson and Vasquez are exactly the kind of leaders this work depends on. They have been instrumental in clinching legislative victories for habitat, access, and conservation funding that will impact hunting and fishing opportunities for years to come. And we’re honored to celebrate the contributions of Eric Siegfried and Laura Orvidas at onX, whose work has fundamentally changed how hunters and anglers engage with public lands.”

Representative Glenn “GT” Thompson (R-Pa.) 
(L to R) TRCP Board Member Steven Rinella, Representative Glenn “GT” Thompson, and TRCP CEO and Board Chair Matt Cook

Representative Glenn “GT” Thompson of Pennsylvania has been a consistent and effective voice for hunters and anglers who depend on healthy working lands.  As Chairman of the House Agriculture Committee, his commitment to conservation programs within the Farm Bill - and his willingness to work across the aisle to advance them - reflects exactly the kind of durable, results-oriented leadership that moves the needle for hunters and anglers. And under his leadership, the Conservation and Forestry Titles have been a priority, not an afterthought – including fighting to secure one of, if not, the largest increases in funding for the Conservation Title in history  He is also a leader in combating the spread of Chronic Wasting Disease, as he fought to get the Chronic Wasting Disease Research and Management Act signed into law, and was instrumental in the inclusion of the Habitat Connectivity on Working Lands Act in the House Farm Bill.  

Representative Gabe Vasquez (D-N.M.) 
(L to R) TRCP Board Member Steven Rinella, Representative Gabe Vasquez, and TRCP CEO and Board Chair Matt Cook

Representative Gabe Vasquez of New Mexico represents a district defined by some of the West’s most storied hunting and fishing country and he has championed policies that protect public land access, wildlife corridors, and the sporting traditions that bring communities together.  As a member of the House Agriculture Committee, he works to build conservation solutions on private land that benefit wildlife and support farmers and ranchers. His work goes further though, as he has emerged as a leading champion for public lands conservation and access. He introduced the bipartisan Public Lands in Public Hands Act,  Habitat Connectivity on Working Lands Act, and co-founded the bipartisan Public Lands Caucus.

Eric Siegfried and Laura Orvidas, onX 
(L to R) TRCP Board Member Steven Rinella, onX founder Eric Siegfried, onX CEO Laura Orvidas, and TRCP CEO and Board Chair Matt Cook

Eric Siegfried, founder of onX, helped catalyze groundbreaking work with TRCP to identify 16.43 million acres of landlocked public lands across 22 states – an effort that helped drive full, permanent funding of the Land and Water Conservation Fund, elevate public access in federal land policy, and inspire landmark legislation like the MAPLand Act

As CEO, Laura Orvidas has built on that foundation by advancing passage of the MAPLand and MAPWaters Acts, championing walk-in access programs including the Farm Bill’s Voluntary Public Access and Habitat Incentive Program, and mobilizing the onX community to defend and expand access to public lands. Together, Siegfried, Orvidas, and the team at onX, represent what is possible when innovation and a deep commitment to the hunting and fishing community come together in service of conservation.   

Now in its 18th year, the Capital Conservation Awards Dinner has become one of Washington’s premier gatherings at the intersection of conservation, policy, and the American sporting tradition. TRCP looks forward to continuing that work alongside its partners and supporters in the year ahead.  

The 18th annual Capital Conservation Awards Dinner was made possible with the support of the following generous sponsors: 


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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April 16, 2026

Big Game Migration Conservation Momentum Continues to Build in Idaho

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

On March 24, the Idaho legislature took official steps to acknowledge the importance of migration conservation and habitat connectivity for iconic species such as deer, elk, moose, and pronghorn, while also committing to making the state’s highways safer for motorists and wildlife alike.

It appears that the momentum of Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 124 has spilled over into April.

In coordination with the Idaho Department of Fish and Game, the Idaho Transportation Department is breaking ground on three underpasses on U.S. Highway 30 near Montpelier. This grant-funded project will include the installation of two concrete box culverts, one bridge, and six road miles of eight-foot-tall fencing.

Twice a year, a mule deer herd important to hunters that numbers anywhere between 4,000 and 11,000 animals crosses the highway between summer and winter range. This stretch of highway intersects with Rocky Point, a landscape feature that concentrates mule deer movement along their migration route. IDFG and ITD data show that on one 20-mile stretch of highway, 70 percent of wildlife-automobile collisions occur at Rocky Point. This project targets that section.

The $12-million project is funded by a grant which was part of $125 million in federal grants awarded to 16 states through the Federal Highway Administration’s Wildlife Crossings Pilot Program in 2025.

The Rocky Point underpasses are the latest example of the Gem State prioritizing public safety and embracing big game migration conservation. Other crossing projects include the Cervidae Peak overpass on Highway 21 northeast of Boise and the exclusionary fencing along Highway 28 in Lemhi Valley.

With the human population and development increasing in Idaho, these investments could not be better timed as it is critical to protect motorists and conserve wildlife as highways grow busier and habitat fragmentation continues.

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

Photo Credit: IDFG

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April 15, 2026

Speak Up for the Tongass

The Tongass needs your voice

Whether it’s casting to salmon in a clear Southeast Alaska stream or moving quietly through old growth in search of deer, healthy habitat makes these experiences possible.

Last month, we shared an update on the next phase of the Tongass forest plan revision. That process is moving forward, and the opportunity for hunters and anglers to weigh in is NOW!

The U.S. Forest Service is currently accepting public input on early draft plan content which will help determine how these 16.7 million acres of public land will be managed for fish, wildlife, and access for decades to come.

Why This Matters

The Tongass is one of the most intact temperate rainforests in the world and one of the most important landscapes in Alaska for hunting and fishing.

The Tongass supports:

  • World-class salmon and steelhead fisheries.
  • Critical summer and winter habitat for Sitka black-tailed deer.
  • Vast, roadless public lands that provide access and hunting and fishing opportunities.
  • Sustainable timber harvest that contributes to rural economies and culture.

This forest plan will serve as the blueprint guiding how those values are managed. While it doesn’t authorize projects directly, it will shape every future decision on the forest through the life of the plan, typically 20 years or more.

The Tongass supports world-class salmon and steelhead fisheries.

Where We Are Now

The Forest Service is currently seeking input on Preliminary Draft Plan Content and Species of Conservation Concern in an early and highly influential stage of the process. This is not the full draft plan but it acts as the foundation for what’s to come. The agency is actively asking for feedback to:

  • Refine management direction.
  • Develop alternatives for analysis.
  • Identify the most important issues to carry forward.

At this stage, public input helps shape and define the options before they are finalized. In many ways, this is the moment when the range and scope of future decisions is defined. The draft plan itself is built around identifying “desired conditions” for the future state of habitat, watersheds, and access that management will aim to achieve over time.

What the Draft Plan Shows

The preliminary draft offers an early look at how the Forest Service is thinking about the future of the Tongass.

Key themes include:

  • A stronger focus on ecosystem integrity, resilience, and connectivity.
  • Recognition that healthy watersheds are foundational to sustaining salmon and fisheries.
  • Continued emphasis on subsistence, recreation, and local economies.
  • The need to adapt to changing habitat and water system conditions.

The agency has also identified a need to update and refine how the forest is managed, creating a clear opportunity to ensure conservation and habitat values remain central.

The Tongass supports wild, remote backcountry areas where hunters can hunt big game such as Sitka black-tails.

Species of Conservation Concern

Alongside the draft plan, the Forest Service is also asking for input on a proposed list of Species of Conservation Concern. These are native species where there is concern about their long-term survival in the Tongass based on the best available science. Out of more than 500 species reviewed, 32 have been identified as having substantial conservation concern. Included in the list are mountain goats and spruce grouse located on Prince of Wales Island.

Many of these species face shared challenges, including:

  • Habitat loss and fragmentation.
  • Changes in temperature, snowpack, and precipitation.
  • Pressure from development and recreation.
  • Small or isolated populations.

This matters because the final forest plan must include management direction that supports these species and the habitats they depend on. In many cases, that means maintaining the same habitat values hunters and anglers care about most: healthy watersheds, intact forests, and connected landscapes.

Submit a Comment and Other Ways to Engage

Right now, the Forest Service is asking for specific, substantive feedback. Below is a sample comment that you can use to guide your own personal comment.

This comment period is open through May 6, 2026, 11:59 PM (Alaska Time), and input submitted now will directly influence how the draft plan and alternatives are developed.

Sample Comment

I support a Tongass forest plan that maintains old-growth habitat critical for deer, conserves salmon-bearing watersheds, and ensures long-term access for hunting and fishing. The plan should also recognize the conservation value of the millions of acres of wild, remote backcountry that define the Tongass and support high-quality habitats as well as hunting and fishing experiences. Management should prioritize habitat connectivity, watershed health, and science-based young-growth restoration to sustain fish and wildlife populations while supporting local economies.

In addition to submitting written comments, the Forest Service is hosting in-person public meetings across Southeast Alaska this April.

If you’re in Southeast Alaska, showing up in person can make a real difference in how this plan develops as these are the best times to hear directly from agency staff, ask questions about the plan, and ensure local voices are part of the conversation.  

Photo Credits: Bjorn Dihle

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March 5, 2026

Oregon Legislature Passes Landmark “1.25 Percent for Wildlife” Act

After three legislative sessions and more than a decade of advocacy, a bipartisan coalition secures Oregon’s most significant conservation funding victory in a generation

Yesterday, the Oregon legislature passed HB 4134, the “1.25 Percent for Wildlife” act, which will generate approximately $38 million annually for fish, wildlife, and habitat conservation across the state. The bill now heads to Governor Kotek’s desk to be signed into law. The measure passed the Senate with bipartisan support after clearing the House on a 36–22 vote, marking the culmination of more than a decade of work by hunters, anglers, landowners, conservation organizations, and community leaders.

The legislation was championed by Representatives Ken Helm (D–Beaverton), Mark Owens (R–Crane), and Senator Todd Nash (R-Joseph) among others, who built bipartisan support across both chambers to advance the proposal.

“This is what happens when sportsmen and sportswomen, ranchers, conservation organizations, and community leaders refuse to give up,” said Tristan Henry, Oregon field representative for the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership. “The Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership has worked to advance this funding in some form for three sessions now. Today, Oregonians reaffirmed our commitment to the fish, wildlife, and landscapes that define this state. Hunters and anglers have shouldered the financial load of conservation for over a century. This bill asks the broader public, and the visitors who come here to enjoy what we’ve helped build, to share in that investment.”

HB 4134 ensures that visitors contribute to sustaining the resources they come to Oregon to experience. (James Wicks)

Where the Money Comes From

HB 4134 increases Oregon’s statewide transient lodging tax by 1.25 percentage points, from 1.5 percent to 2.75 percent, beginning January 1, 2027. Oregon will remain among the lowest lodging tax states in the nation after the increase. Roughly two-thirds of the tax is paid by out-of-state visitors. For Oregonians, the cost amount rises to roughly $1.25 to $2.50 on an average overnight stay.

The new revenue is dedicated to nine clearly defined conservation and natural resource programs through predictable funding that does not depend on biennial budget negotiations or one-time General Fund deposits.

Where the Money Goes

The scale of this investment is best understood in context. ODFW’s entire biennial budget is approximately $562 million, funded primarily through a combination of hunting and fishing license revenue, federal grants, and limited General Fund support. Before this bill passed, the agency had zero dedicated funding for implementing Oregon’s State Wildlife Action Plan, the science-based blueprint that identifies 321 species of greatest conservation need and 11 habitat types requiring proactive restoration. One-time General Fund deposits of $10 million per biennium had been used in prior budget cycles, but those are phased out entirely in the current 2025–27 budget.

HB 4134 changes that picture. The largest allocation, approximately $27.4 million per year, flows to the newly renamed Recovering Oregon’s Wildlife Fund Subaccount to implement the State Wildlife Action Plan and Oregon Nearshore Strategy. allocating 0.9% of Oregon’s transient lodging revenue for habitat restoration, species recovery, and conservation strategy implementation. For an agency that has been forced to cut $1.3 million from anti-poaching campaigns, $1.9 million from fish research and monitoring, and $1.5 million from hatchery operations in recent budgets, this is not incremental. It is transformative. The remaining [approximate] $10.6 million per year is allocated across eight additional programs.

Oregon Conservation Corps (0.10% [of transient lodging revenue]): Stable funding for wildfire risk reduction, community resilience, and natural resources workforce development. This investment supports young Oregonians working in land management careers while building fire-adapted communities across the state.

ODFW Wildlife Connectivity Program (0.050%): Funding for wildlife crossing structures, passage improvements, and research to reduce wildlife-vehicle collisions and reconnect fragmented habitats. Oregon’s highway system intersects critical migration corridors for elk, mule deer, and other species, and connectivity work is among the highest-return conservation investments available.

Oregon State Police Fish and Wildlife Division (0.050%): New resources for the troopers on the front lines against poaching, a persistent threat to Oregon’s fish and wildlife that directly undermines the work of hunters and anglers. ODFW’s most recent budget included a $600,000 cut to OSP enforcement funded by the agency. This allocation more than reverses that reduction and provides a durable funding base.

Wolf Management Compensation and Proactive Trust Fund (0.050%): Dedicated funding for livestock loss compensation, nonlethal deterrence tools, and conflict reduction programs. For ranching families in Eastern Oregon who have borne the costs of wolf recovery with limited and uncertain state support, this delivers on a long-standing commitment.

Oregon Conservation and Recreation Fund (0.050%): Community-based conservation and recreation grants that engage Oregonians in hands-on outdoor stewardship. This fund, established by the legislature in 2019 but chronically underfunded, will finally have a sustainable revenue source.

Wildlife Stewardship Program (0.020%): Support for wildlife rehabilitation facilities and stewardship priorities statewide.

Invasive Species Response (0.005%): Resources for detection, prevention, and removal of harmful invasive species that threaten native fish, wildlife, and habitat.

Department of Justice Anti-Poaching (0.010%): Stabilized capacity within DOJ to support prosecution of wildlife crimes.

The new revenue is dedicated to nine clearly defined conservation and natural resource programs through predictable funding that does not depend on biennial budget negotiations or one-time General Fund deposits. (Jim Davis)

A Decade in the Making

The passage of HB 4134 is the product of persistent, bipartisan advocacy that stretches back more than a decade. Representative Ken Helm (D-Beaverton) and Representative Mark Owens (R-Crane) have served as the bill’s chief sponsors, building support across party lines in both chambers. The concept was first introduced as a legislative concept and advanced in varying forms through prior sessions. The TRCP has worked to advance this funding mechanism for three consecutive legislative sessions, helping to build the hunting and fishing coalition that gave the bill credibility with lawmakers in both parties and from every corner of the state.

The broader coalition behind HB 4134 spans more than 60 organizations, from the Oregon Hunters Association and Backcountry Hunters & Anglers to Oregon Wild and the Nature Conservancy, from the Oregon Cattlemen’s Association to the League of Women Voters of Oregon. More than 2,000 pieces of public testimony were submitted during the legislative process, with over 84 percent in support. That breadth of support reflects a simple truth: Oregonians across the political spectrum understand that healthy fish, wildlife, and habitat are the foundation of the state’s identity, economy, and quality of life.

What This Means for Oregon

Oregon’s outdoor recreation economy generates $16 billion in consumer spending, supports 192,000 jobs, and accounts for 2.6 percent of the state’s GDP. Ninety percent of visitors come to Oregon to enjoy the state’s natural landscapes and wildlife. HB 4134 ensures that those visitors contribute to sustaining the resources they come here to experience.

For ODFW, this bill represents the most significant new funding stream in the agency’s modern history. The TRCP thanks the representatives and senators who supported this bill, the conservation organizations that engaged their members and provided testimony, and the thousands of Oregon hunters and anglers who sent emails, made phone calls, and championed this measure. For all this work, a brighter future for our hunting, fishing, ranching, and outdoor heritage has been secured.

Feature Image: James Wicks


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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