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In the Arena: Sandy Moret

Sandy Moret is on the board of directors for Bonefish & Tarpon Trust and is past president of the Everglades Protection Association. He also has served on the East Everglades/Everglades National Park Advisory Board. In 2018, he received the Lifetime Achievement Award from outdoor retailer Orvis for his work with the “Now or Neverglades” movement.

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May 19, 2026

Arizona cares about water & forests (2)-750

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May 12, 2026

Colorado River Water Crisis the Number-One Concern for Arizonans

A full 94 percent of voters, across all demographics, say water security and Colorado River protection should be a state budget priority 

Hunters and anglers have always understood that without water, there can be no fish and wildlife. Record-breaking drought, extreme heat and record low snowpacks across the West have pushed natural systems in the region, including in the Grand Canyon State, to the brink. Fish, wildlife, and those of us in Arizona who value them are feeling the strain.

A new statewide poll shows that members of the outdoor community aren’t the only ones concerned about the current situation, however, and highlights the mounting concerns Arizonans feel about water security. With only a few weeks until the Arizona state budget is finalized and budget negotiations for the next fiscal year continue, the poll delivers a clear message from voters to lawmakers: invest in Colorado River water security immediately.

The poll, conducted by conservative polling firm Cygnal, shows unequivocal bipartisan support for investing state funds to protect Colorado River water supplies. Perhaps most notably, 94 percent of respondents think addressing water scarcity and water supply issues for the Colorado River must be a priority in the upcoming state budget. Respondents indicated that water supply and Colorado River protection are their highest priority, above all other issues including inflation, education, immigration and border security. Other key poll findings include:

  • The creation of a Colorado River Protection Fund has broad support by a margin of 10-to-1 (75 percent support, just 7 percent oppose).
  • Water, water supply, and drought preparedness are viewed as the top environmental priority, with nearly 68 percent saying this is their chief concern. Land conservation was another top concern.
  • 90 percent of voters indicated that state legislators should make water security and addressing water scarcity in the Colorado River a priority in the current legislative session.

“Investing in these projects could improve overall watershed health and wildlife habitat.”

State funding from a Colorado River Protection Fund could help reduce water usage across all sectors, store more water on the landscape, reduce the impacts of drought and wildfire, and pay water users for participating in risk mitigation activities that stabilize Lake Mead’s water levels over the next 1 to 3 years. In addition to compensating water users for reducing their consumption of Colorado River water, the fund would target existing water infrastructure and support new water conservation efforts at a landscape scale.

Investing in landscape-scale projects could improve overall watershed health and wildlife habitat; reduce the risk of catastrophic wildfires; prevent devastating post-fire floods; and enhance natural water storage potential in high-elevation headwaters streams. This would boost the reliability of in-state water supplies and protect habitat for the state’s most sensitive fish species, like the Apache trout.

Healthy watersheds clearly matter to Arizonans. Allocating state funds to secure Arizona’s water future by investing in Colorado River infrastructure and restoration is an important step toward protecting Arizona’s natural heritage, including the wildlife and fish that sportsmen and sportswomen value.

In the face of an uncertain future, protecting the Colorado River and the waters that feed into it, in Arizona and across the West, offers the potential to preserve our outdoor heritage and safeguard the hunting and fishing economy.

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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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May 6, 2026

Fisheries Board Defers Advancing Plan to Address Chesapeake Bay Menhaden Management

Menhaden Management Board of the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission votes to form a work group to revise a path for management changes going forward, in lieu of approving an existing plan document for public comment

In another delay for Chesapeake Bay menhaden conservation, the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission’s (ASMFC) Menhaden Management Board deferred advancing an addendum to revise Chesapeake Bay menhaden management at their May 5 meeting. The Board had been widely expected to advance the addendum, which offers a range of possible management changes, into a public comment period, but instead elected to merely form a work group to revise the document further.

In essence, this doesn’t mean the addendum will not advance, but it does represent another delay in the face of mounting observational evidence that menhaden management in the Bay is in need of revisions.

Draft Addendum II is the ASMFC’s latest effort to address concerns about the impacts of the menhaden reduction fishing industry in Chesapeake Bay. The addendum was initiated after years of mounting concerns that large-scale reduction fishing is removing too many menhaden from the Bay, impacting other commercial harvesters and the Bay ecosystem itself. The initiation of this process is expected to be a step toward addressing one of the most persistent challenges in Atlantic menhaden management: deciding how many menhaden, and at what times of the year, should be harvested in the Chesapeake to mitigate environmental impacts as well as impacts to other fisheries.

CosmoVision Media

The draft addendum focuses squarely on the Bay, which is the most important nursery area for Atlantic menhaden and the predators that depend on them, including striped bass and ospreys. And while the coastwide menhaden stock is not currently considered overfished, how and where menhaden are harvested in this critical region matters deeply for the ecosystem and species that depend on this forage fish coastwide.

What’s in Draft Addendum II?

Currently, the reduction industry’s Bay harvest is limited by a cap of approximately 112 million pounds each year. A cap of varying tonnage has been in place since 2006, first implemented by the Board as a precautionary measure to mitigate industry impacts on the Bay. Originally, the cap was meant as a stopgap measure while research was to be conducted to identify what the appropriate Bay harvest should be – to leave enough menhaden in the water to support their critical ecosystem role as forage for the Bay’s iconic predators. However, here we are, 20 years later, without answers to these same questions.

The draft addendum proposes two key changes designed to reduce the reduction fishery’s impact on the Bay:

  • Lowering the Chesapeake Bay Reduction Fishing Cap: Draft Addendum II presents options to cut the cap by 10, 20, 30, or 50 percent. Any of these reductions (the Board also can opt to maintain status quo) would help improve forage availability for striped bass, bluefish, and other species that rely on menhaden, especially at a time when we’re trying to rebuild their populations.
  • Adding Seasonal Quota Periods: The addendum also includes several options for quota periods, which would distribute the annual Bay harvest throughout the fishing season. Spreading harvest out over time could improve menhaden availability for predators like stripers and ospreys, as well as other commercial industries, at various times throughout the season, and better align fishing pressure with ecosystem needs.

The Board determined that some of the options in the draft document warrant further internal discussion to clarify their original intent and feasibility, especially options which address the potential of any overharvest or underharvest of quota within individual quota periods.

CosmoVision Media

What Happens Next

The Menhaden Management Board will now form a work group to revisit the draft addendum document and clarify certain sections ahead of the ASMFC meeting this August. The Board will then debate the document once more, and will hopefully officially approve Draft Addendum II, initiating a public comment period in the fall where stakeholders can weigh in on preferred management changes.

Hopefully this delay offers a silver lining and results in improvements to the clarity and intent of Draft Addendum II, and the public will still be able to make their voices heard in the coming months. Reducing the Chesapeake Bay Reduction Fishing Cap and spreading harvest across the fishing season are practical solutions to real ecological challenges. But they will only become reality if there is clear public support.

This is not just a technical adjustment to Bay harvest. It’s a chance to improve striped bass recovery efforts, ensure better forage fish availability across the Chesapeake Bay, and push management further toward real ecosystem-based approaches.

For more information about the ASMFC’s anticipated addendum timeline, visit the Draft Addendum II webpage.

All images courtesy CosmoVision Media

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April 30, 2026

New Farm Bill Passes the House: Key Impacts for Hunters and Anglers

Today, the House of Representatives passed the Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026, a meaningful step forward for hunters, anglers, farmers, ranchers, and the working lands we all depend on.

We are now closer to a comprehensive ag policy update than we have been since 2018. Today, the House of Representatives passed the Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026 on a 224-200 vote, with bipartisan support. 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 underlying structure that makes these programs work. 

“We’re grateful to Chairman Thompson, Ranking Member Angie Craig, and members on both sides of the aisle who worked to advance conservation priorities that benefit hunters, anglers, wildlife habitat and the farmers, ranchers, and landowners who steward these lands every day. This bill recognizes that healthy, productive working lands are good for everyone,” said Aaron Field, TRCP’s director of private lands conservation. “This is one step in a longer journey – negotiations will continue and a Senate process awaits – but we’re encouraged by the bipartisan commitment to building a Farm Bill that works for sportsmen, sportswomen, and working lands alike.”

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

Compared to House votes on recent Farm Bills, this bill received stronger than average support from both Republicans and Democrats, with 14 Democrats voting in support. With tight margins in the Senate, bipartisanship will be essential. Major sticking points remain, including earlier changes within the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, state authority to regulate swine production, and year-round use of higher blends of ethanol in gasoline. 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 passage is a major step forward, but further debate will occur as the bill moves to the Senate. Currently, Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman John Boozman (R-Ark.) and Ranking Member Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) are working on their own proposal. Although the bills will likely be very similar, there will be changes before this bill becomes law. 

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 committee markup, 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. 

You can help. Conservation is, and should be, a shared priority regardless of party affiliation or ideology. Congress needs to hear that this is important to you. Take action here

Top photo: @NickMKE on Flickr.


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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