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New Federal Funding Takes Aim at CWD – Here’s What it Means for Hunters

USDA's $12 million investment supports CWD research, management, and prevention across wild and farmed cervid populations

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May 18, 2026

New Federal Funding Takes Aim at CWD – Here’s What it Means for Hunters

USDA’s $12 million investment supports CWD research, management, and prevention across wild and farmed cervid populations

Last week, the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) announced that it will invest approximately $12 million aimed at controlling and preventing chronic wasting disease (CWD) in wild and farmed members of the deer family. For hunters and wildlife managers who have been urging serious federal attention on CWD, this is welcome news. 

The funding will be competitively awarded to states, Tribal governments, research institutions, and universities. It covers: 

  • $6 million for farmed cervid CWD control and prevention 
  • $5 million for wild cervid research and management 
  • $500,000 for CWD prevention on Tribal lands 

Past federal cooperative funding has already produced real results such as expanded surveillance, improved diagnostics, hunter education, and new tools for understanding disease spread. This investment aims to build on that work. 

Why it Matters for Hunters 

This funding comes at a critical moment. CWD is the most serious threat facing members of the deer family today – it’s spreading and there’s no cure. And infected animals can look healthy for years, which makes management hard and misinformation easy.  

While more hunters are finding CWD in their backyards, it remains a source of confusion for many. TRCP has been engaged on CWD for years – working with state and federal partners, advocating for resources, and helping hunters understand what the disease means for their time in the field. Our Deer Season: Hunting and CWD blog series brings together six first-person accounts from hunters navigating CWD across the country to explore best practices aimed at addressing the spread of CWD.

From pre-season prep and regulation changes to lessons learned in the woods and around deer camp, these stories will show how everyday hunters are part of the solution.  

Stay Informed 

This funding is a step forward. Sustained progress on curbing the spread of CWD depends on an informed and engaged hunting community. 

Visit www.trcp.org/chronic-wasting-disease to find tips, resources, and reflections that tie together our love of the hunt with our shared responsibility to keep deer herds healthy for future generations.  

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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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February 5, 2026

Deer Season: Hunting & CWD – Lessons Learned and What Comes Next

Six stories from the field reveal how hunters across the country are navigating CWD – and why staying informed matters.

Over the course of the 2025 deer season, TRCP shared six stories from three hunters across three states – Minnesota, Montana, and Pennsylvania – each offering a window into how Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) is shaping modern deer hunting.

Taken together, these reflections reinforced a simple truth: while landscapes, regulations, and traditions may differ, hunters across the country are grappling with the same questions about herd health, responsibility, and the future of the resource. 

Catch up on the Deer Season – Hunting & CWD posts HERE

Minnesota: Learning in Real Time 

Our Minnesota stories captured what it feels like to hunt in a state where CWD is no longer theoretical – it’s something hunters must actively account for each season. 

In A Season of Firsts in Minnesota, TRCP’s Aaron Field described the challenge that comes with navigating new testing requirements, rethinking long-held routines, and confronting uncertainty in moments that once felt automatic. Those early decisions required slowing down and asking questions in the effort to seek out reliable sources and evaluate new information.

Later, in A Minnesota Season Revisited he looked back on that experience with added perspective – showing how awareness and familiarity can replace hesitation with confidence, and how informed hunters become more comfortable stewards of the resource. 

Takeaway: Staying informed doesn’t just encourage participation – it builds confidence. When hunters understand the why behind testing and management, stewardship becomes part of the hunt, not a disruption to it. 

Montana: Tradition, Family, and the Long View 

Montana’s stories focused on something deeper than data alone: how CWD conversations fit into family traditions and the act of passing hunting on to the next generation. 

In A Hunting Journal: Found, and New Hunters in the Making, TRCP’s Ryan Chapin reflected on discovering old hunting journals while introducing young hunters to the field – connecting past, present, and future. That theme continued in Reflections From Our Family’s Montana Hunting Season, in which he emphasized that healthy herds are foundational to keeping those traditions alive. 

Takeaway: CWD isn’t just a challenge for wildlife managers – it’s a generational one rooted in our hunting traditions. Decisions made today shape the opportunities available tomorrow. 

Pennsylvania: Preparation and Perspective 

In Pennsylvania, the series followed TRCP’s Jim Kauffman’s season from start to finish – beginning with preparation and ending with reflection. 

In Prepping for the Pennsylvania Season, he highlighted the importance of understanding local regulations, disease management zones, and best practices before opening day.

Later, in Reflections From a Pennsylvania Deer Season he underscored how preparation pays off – leading to informed choices in the field and greater trust in the system designed to safeguard healthy deer herds. 

Takeaway: Responsible hunting starts well before the season – and informed hunters are essential partners in effective wildlife management. 

A Shared Set of Lessons 

Midway through the season, we paused to take stock in A Mid-Season Check-In. By season’s end, those early observations only rang truer. 

Across all six stories, several themes stood out: 

  • CWD is already influencing how, where, and why hunters make decisions 
  • Hunters play a critical role in surveillance, testing, and curbing the spread. 
  • Clear information builds trust and participation 
  • Science-based management works best when it reflects lived experience 

One lesson came through clearly across all six dispatches: staying informed is one of the most important tools hunters have. CWD regulations, testing protocols, and management strategies continue to evolve, and understanding how – and why – they change helps hunters make confident, responsible decisions in the field. For those looking to dig deeper, TRCP has compiled science-based resources and practical information on Chronic Wasting Disease at trcp.org/chronic-wasting-disease. 

What Comes Next 

One message we heard consistently – both in these stories and in feedback from hunters across the country – is that this conversation is needed, valued, and far from over, and that hunter voices are essential to it.   

CWD remains one of the most serious long-term threats to deer herds and the hunting traditions tied to them. Addressing it requires continued investment in research, monitoring, and education – and an ongoing commitment to keeping hunters informed and engaged. 

Because of the strong response to this series, Deer Season: Hunting & CWD will continue. We’ll keep elevating hunter voices, sharing real-world perspectives, and connecting those experiences to the science and policies that safeguard the future of deer hunting. 

Stay tuned – more stories from the field are coming soon. In the meantime, staying informed remains one of the most important ways hunters can contribute to healthy deer herds. As research, regulations, and management strategies continue to evolve, TRCP will keep sharing perspectives from the field alongside the science behind them. Learn more about Chronic Wasting Disease here.

Catch up on the Deer Season – Hunting & CWD posts HERE

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January 15, 2026

Deer Season: Hunting & CWD – A Minnesota Season Revisited 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

“There’s a deer coming, Dad!” 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Deer Season – Hunting and CWD.

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

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

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

Learn more about Chronic Wasting Disease here.

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December 22, 2025

Deer Season: Hunting & CWD- Reflections from our Family’s Montana Hunting Season

A season-long reflection from TRCP’s Ryan Chapin on family, tradition, and stewardship during a Montana hunting season

Across the country, deer season looks a little different than it did a generation ago. In Ryan Chapin’s first installment in TRCP’s Deer Season: Hunting & CWD series (Deer Season – Hunting & CWD: A Hunting Journal Found and New Hunters in the Making), Chapin reflected on how hunting traditions are passed on and how responsibility now comes with every tag filled. His second installment from Montana builds on that theme, offering another family’s perspective on how Chronic Wasting Disease has become part of modern hunting seasons, shaping preparation, harvest decisions, and the way hunters contribute to wildlife conservation while keeping time-honored traditions strong

Now that the 2025 big game season is in the rearview mirror and our freezers are full, I’ve had some time to reflect as my mind categorizes the many moments that make up an entire season.  The memories replay vividly like daydreams, but I smile inwardly knowing that these memories are real and now a part of all who participated.  

There’s the memory of canoeing with my son and brother at night back to camp while stars hung bright above and elk bugles echoed off glassy water, or the memory of watching my wife and son work together to find her second ever mule deer buck in the rifle’s scope before she could make the shot. I still laugh when I recount her words, “I only see a little black circle filled with grass and no buck, what the heck!”  Then there’s the memory of my two bird dogs, in sled dog harnesses to “Dog-assist” me and a mountain bike four miles up a steep grade where I harvested a whitetail buck, there’s a memory of my son and I talking quietly together as the sun set while we sat on a mountain top, and finally, the surreal memory of our whole family, my brother’s family, and our collective three dogs all working together as our daughter Ella harvested her first elk. Taken as a whole, these moments are gifts etched into my memory adding a sense of gratitude for the ever-fleeting time we all spend together during the fall hunting season.

CWD Best Practices in Action 

To an extent, CWD shaped each of our hunts this year, not as a barrier but as part of the tasks and responsibilities of the season. Before the season we checked FWP’s latest updates and mapped out the units where testing was required, which did not include any of the units we hunted. Nonetheless, we still carried sample kits alongside knives and game bags, and we made a habit of taking lymph node samples as soon as an animal was down.  We made a point to turn it into a fun, shared experience – much like we did with Ella’s first elk.  We processed Ella’s elk around a large warming fire and the kids helped identify and cut out the lymph nodes while the adults discussed how testing informs biologists and ultimately helps protect the herd. All our deer tests came back negative, but Ella’s elk results are still pending.  Implementing best management practices is one way my family and I can contribute to the science database and is one more way we honor the animals that we hunt and eat. 

Reflections

Looking back at the highs; the bugling elk, Kate’s mule deer success, the dogs and our bikejoring whitetail, time on the mountain with Quinn, Ella’s “family” elk, and all the other moments in between, I’m struck by how hunting has evolved for our family. These are the same moments I’ve tried to capture in my hunting journals and shared in the first installment of this series – moments defined by family, effort, and time afield. It is no longer only about filling tags, as it once was for me.  Now, tags are still filled, but we also practice care, teach the next generation, and adapt to ensure that these traditions endure. 

As I look to next season, I’m hopeful.  The hope is that our kids, and their kids, will someday stand in these same forests and climb these same ridges, where their own memories will layer on top of mine to close out their own fleeting, yet sugar-sweet hunting seasons. In the meantime, it’s on all of us to carry the many responsibilities that are stitched into each season by doing our part now to ensure that future generations have the same or even greater opportunities. Someday, I hope those future seasons are captured in my kids own hunting journals, carrying forward not just the stories of the hunt, but the knowledge, care, and responsibility that will keep these traditions strong. 

Deer Season – Hunting and CWD.

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

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

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

Learn more about Chronic Wasting Disease here.

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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