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In the Spotlight

AZ State Budget a Win for Fisheries & Wildlife, But Highlights Future Needs for Water Protections

A bipartisan state budget was approved in Arizona for 2027 after weeks of negotiations between state lawmakers and the Governor, resulting in wins for fisheries and wildlife, but more work needed for water protections.

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June 16, 2026

Menhaden Graphic – Atlantic Allocation Map-Final_11-10-25_800

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June 11, 2026

MAPLand Milestone Marks Major Step Forward for Public Access

New access information is now available, good behavior encouraged when using easements

In May 2026, TRCP announced that federal land management agencies had completed a key first step in implementing the 2022 Modernizing Access to our Public Land Act by publishing more than 30,000 records of easements and reservations that secure public rights-of-way across private land. The newly available data was released through the MAPLand ARC GIS Hub, making it easier for hunters, anglers, outdoor recreationists, land managers, and mapping companies to identify and use legal access routes to enjoy and effectively manage public lands.

This access success was years in the making.

When onX and TRCP launched a collaborative effort in 2018 to better understand the scope of inaccessible public lands, we had no idea where the work would lead. That research ultimately found that 16.43 million acres of federal, state, and local public lands across 22 states are effectively landlocked and lack legal public access.

Eight years later, that effort has helped drive a growing body of work focused on expanding and improving public access. Recreational access funding is now a mandated component of the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund, federal agencies have identified priority areas for opening landlocked public lands and lands with restricted access, and agencies are now digitizing and mapping public access information so it can be integrated into smartphone applications, third-party mapping platforms, and other digital tools.

TRCP and our partners are working toward a future where Americans can clearly identify which roads and routes are public and which are private so hunters, anglers, and other recreationists do not have to turn around at an unmarked two-track wondering whether they are legally allowed to continue.

This access work took a major step forward recently as the more than 30,000 access easement records uploaded onto a new MAPLand geospatial platform are now available on the onX Hunt App for hunters and anglers to use and explore.

If an easement appears on the MAPLand platform, the relevant federal agency has determined that public access rights exist. It has been estimated that roughly 90,000 permanent access easements and reservations may ultimately be digitized through this effort.

How to Use New Access Easements

Access easements are legal rights-of-way across private land that allow public and/or administrative access to public lands. If an easement appears on the MAPLand platform, the relevant federal agency has determined that public access rights exist. Thousands of additional  access easements and reservations are expected to be digitized through this effort.

Many of these easements were secured decades ago and, until now, existed primarily in paper records stored in agency offices and county courthouses. Similar to the early days of GPS mapping technology, when previously overlooked public parcels suddenly became visible and available to the public, some of these access routes are likely unfamiliar to recreationists, and nearby landowners may not be accustomed to the public using them.

As this information becomes more widely available, we encourage recreationists to use good judgment and act respectfully. Easements provide a legal access right, but the underlying land remains private property. If an easement is gated, if no road was ever constructed, or if conditions on the ground appear unclear, do not assume vehicle access is appropriate. In situations where conflict or confusion may arise, contact the local land management agency or game warden before using the route. It is also often a good idea to respectfully communicate with nearby landowners to avoid misunderstandings.

If something on the map appears inconsistent or confusing, use the MAPLand GeoPlatform site HERE to provide feedback, or contact the local district or field office so staff can review the underlying records and help clarify the situation. Responsible use of these easements will be critical to maintaining long-term support for public access efforts. Decisionmakers from both parties support access easements—let’s keep it that way.

Importantly, this is only the beginning. The recently uploaded easements represent the first major tranche of access information that will become publicly available through MAPLand in the coming years.

Next Steps

The next phase of MAPLand implementation will require federal agencies to geospatially map roads, trails, access sites, and areas with weapon restrictions and make that information publicly available beginning in April 2027. Following that milestone, implementation of the recently passed MAPWaters Act will begin uploading water-access information in 2029.

TRCP appreciates the work of the federal departments and agencies carrying out this effort to improve public access information for hunters, anglers, and other outdoor recreationists. And this milestone is only the beginning. We are continuing to work with Congress and partners to advance additional mapping and access legislation—including the MAPOceans Act and MAPRoads Act—and to build a future where Americans can more easily discover, understand, and responsibly access the public lands and waters they own.

Sign up to learn more about TRCP’s work to secure and enhance recreational access HERE.

Check out the onX Hunt App HERE.

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June 4, 2026

1 Day, 4 Trotlines, 800 lbs. of Invasive Blue Catfish

TRCP got to help firsthand with hauling in trotlines set to remove this aquatic invasive species from the Chesapeake Bay, as part of larger management efforts that require collaboration and partnerships

It’s one thing to read about the abundance of invasive blue catfish in the Chesapeake Bay.  But it’s another thing to experience it for yourself. These voracious predators have now spread throughout most of the Upper Bay and are established in every major tidal river in Maryland.

I recently had the opportunity to spend a day on the water with photographer and waterman Jay Fleming, running a trotline in Maryland to witness first-hand the extent of blue catfish abundance in the Upper Bay. It was enlightening, to say the least. In a few short hours of retrieving lines, our small boat and crew hauled over 800 pounds of invasive blue cats onto the boat – using just four trotlines set in one relatively small area along a single shoreline.

The author with a large blue cat removed from the upper Chesapeake Bay. Credit: Jay Fleming.

The trotlines were already set before we arrived. Each weighted line ran nearly 1,000 feet in length, with circle hooks on mono line attached every 10 feet. Baiting with chunks of gizzard shad, the lines were deployed in relatively shallow waters, rarely exceeding 10 or 12 feet in depth. Retrieval was a fairly straightforward affair – lines are pulled in by hand, removing hooks and fish as they come to the boat. A tug on the line indicates the presence of a protesting blue cat close by in the set. Captured fish are quickly gaffed and brought aboard and the process continues. At the end of the day, we had a boat full of fish and a very long night of fileting ahead of us. But that was one of the best parts, and just one reason why all the work was worth it. Despite their appearance, blue cats make excellent table fare.

Blue Cats Take a Heavy Toll

Introduced to the Bay region in Virginia waters in the 1970s, blue catfish have rapidly expanded their geographic range and numbers throughout the Upper Bay and into Maryland. This aquatic invasive species (AIS) has colonized many of the Bay’s margins, pretty much anywhere salinity levels are tolerable. They are voracious feeders and can attain a size upwards of 100 pounds. As you can imagine, that means they can have a significant impact on native prey species. And these prey species include important species like rockfish (or striped bass), blue crabs, and menhaden – staples of the Bay ecosystem and the center of its cultural and environmental heritage. But the prey items don’t stop there. These catfish also eat shad, herring, mussels, white perch, white clams, razor clams – the list is extensive.

Partially digested menhaden removed from the stomach of a blue catfish. Credit: Jim Kauffman

Blue catfish are now recognized as an existential threat to Bay health. Their prey base is commercially and ecologically vital to the Bay. A culture and economy that is driven by recreational fisheries, commercial fisheries, and blue crabs has a lot to lose from the impacts of blue catfish. And the effects of a non-native, voracious, large predator have created ripple effects throughout the native ecological community, with potentially disastrous consequences. But thankfully efforts are underway to mitigate their impacts.

Solutions Through Federal Policies, Programs, and Legislation

Efforts to encourage increased blue catfish harvest have resulted in federal and state-level initatives that provide resources to incentivize large-scale removals. In March 2026, the House of Representatives passed the Mitigation Action and Watermen Support (MAWS) Act (HR 4294) with bipartisan support. The act, initially sponsored by Reps. Sarah Elfreth (D-MD) and Rob Wittman (R-VA) and now in the hands of the Senate, would help to address barriers that inhibit facilities from effectively processing catfish, due to USDA inspection requirements that are unique to catfish. It would create a two-year pilot program allowing the Chesapeake Bay Office of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to enter agreements with manufacturers or processors of such products as pet food, animal feed, and aquaculture feed – industries that could potentially utilize these invasive catfish as a raw material – to facilitate the purchase of blue catfish harvested from the Bay’s watershed by watermen, or acquired through seafood processors.

Related grants would incentivize increased harvest of this AIS by supporting the necessary transportation, processing, and manufacturing infrastructure to secure a long-term market. With so many blue cats in the Bay, there is little concern of the resource running out anytime soon. The USDA also recently announced investments in seafood processing facilities that will expand their processing capacity and drive production markets for Bay-area blue catfish. Fish at commercial processing facilities that are intended for consumption are typically inspected by the Food and Drug Administration – with the exception of catfish. This means that these facilities need adequate infrastructure for storing and/or processing invasive catfish separately. Funding these upgrades will allow processors to upgrade their facilities, ultimately leading to the removal of more catfish out of the Bay and into markets.

Blue catfish filets are firm and flaky, with a taste similar striped bass (rockfish). Credit: Jim Kauffman 

State-Level Solutions

Maryland lawmakers recently passed legislation that extends the Invasive Blue Catfish Pilot Program. This extends the program through 2030 and gives Maryland DNR more tools to continue working toward reduction efforts. Expanding commercial markets, destigmatizing catfish as table fare, and incentivizing new methods for removal will combine to promote increased harvest.

Multiple pilot programs in the state have been developed to encourage additional reductions in catfish biomass. The For-Hire/Commercial Blue Catfish Pilot Program, the Mid- and Lower-Bay Blue Catfish Trotline Pilot Program, and the Commercial Electrofishing Chase Boat Pilot Program are all designed to incentivize the sale of catfish and expand eligible equipment that can be used to harvest blue cats. And the Chase Boat Pilot Program allows charter boats to net blue catfish that surface during DNR electrofishing surveys. The boats follow behind DNR electrofishing crews, netting and harvesting stunned blue cats – a great example of an innovative solution to a complicated issue.

Just four trotlines set in one small area yielded 800 lbs. of this invasive. Credit: Jim Kauffman

Blue Catfish Working Groups

The Chesapeake Bay Program has convened an Invasive Catfish Work Group, which brings together scientists, local stakeholders, commercial fishery groups, and processors to develop methods and evaluate impacts of blue cats in the Bay. The workgroup also works toward developing actions that implement the five policy objectives outlined in the 2012 Invasive Catfish Policy Adoption Statement.

The Invasive Catfish Advisory Committee brings together stakeholders like fish dealers, processors, commercial harvesters, recreational anglers, and academics through Maryland DNR, the Sport Fisheries Advisory Commission, and the Tidal Fisheries Advisory Commission. This group discusses relevant issues and develops management recommendations for blue catfish management. Working groups like this stress the importance of collaboration and partnerships between various agencies and stakeholders, working toward a common goal.

Legislators, biologists, and stakeholders are together developing many new and innovative solutions to promote harvest. Blue catfish and byproducts are being promoted as fertilizer, pet food, and even food for zoo animals. Blue catfish are even being used for school lunches, and markets are being developed outside of the Bay region through additional USDA Regional Agricultural Promotion Program grants.

It’s hard to comprehend the sheer magnitude of the Bay’s blue catfish problem. How many are out there? And what will it take to mitigate their impacts on native species? Fortunately, local stakeholders, Bay communities, state and federal agencies, and fisheries managers continue to collaborate in an effort to develop solutions. Even as land managers and legislators work on watershed-wide efforts to improve upstream water quality in my home state of Pennsylvania and throughout the watershed, which would improve Bay fisheries, it could all be for naught if these fish are gobbling up the last blue crabs and juvenile stripers in the Bay. Though total harvest continues to climb annually, it has not yet reached a number high enough to turn the tide. Developing a Bay-wide blue catfish management plan that outlines annual goals for harvest will be invaluable for future management.

Total pounds and economic value of blue catfish harvested in Maryland since 2015. Credit: Maryland Department of Natural Resources

What Can You Do?

Well, if you can’t beat ‘em, eat ‘em! Blue catfish filets are thick and white in color. They broil, grill, and fry really well. Annual events in the region showcase local chefs and dishes featuring blue cats as table fare, such as a sold-out Chesapeake Catfish Cook-Off in Annapolis last month,  highlighting just how good these fish taste. Many resources have been developed to promote blue cats for the dinner table, and not just to promote harvest, but because they really are delicious (which I can personally attest to).  And there are a ton of ways to prepare them. Whether you purchase catfish from a market or prefer to fish for them traditionally along Maryland’s Catfish Trail, take the opportunity to try them. You won’t be disappointed.

But also remember that the next aquatic invasive species might not be as delicious, so AIS prevention remains key.

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3 New Louisiana Laws to Improve Menhaden Management

Thanks to support from state legislative champions and recreational fishing, boating, and conservation groups, separate bills addressing Gulf menhaden management have now been signed into laws

Three bills to improve menhaden management and limit the damage caused by the two foreign-owned industrial menhaden companies operating in the Gulf were just signed into law, thanks in part to overwhelming support from recreational fishing and conservation advocacy organizations.

While these new laws will not significantly change the menhaden fleet’s allowable operations on the water, they will add accountability by increasing fines for nearshore fishing violations, enhancing vessel tracking capabilities, and improving fishery oversight by publicizing menhaden harvest reports. These updates are another step toward modernizing Louisiana’s menhaden fishery into a more sustainable, ecosystem-based fishery through clear legislative action.

A pogy boat headed out for menhaden off Louisiana’s coat. Credit: Louisiana Sea Grant

Here’s a brief description of each new law:

Act 316 by Rep. Vinny Cox (R-Gretna) increases fines for menhaden vessels that fish inside nearshore buffer zones.

  • This law responds to longstanding concerns from recreational anglers, charter captains, and coastal communities about industrial menhaden vessels operating too close to shore and impacting fisheries, wildlife, anglers, and fragile beaches. While our hard-won ½-mile coastwide buffer zone was rolled back thanks to industry lobbying last year, at least harsher penalties for violating the remaining ¼-mile zones should now make vessels think twice.

Act 443 by Rep. Joe Orgeron (R-Cut Off) requires disclosure of menhaden harvest data to the public.

  • This law strengthens oversight of the menhaden fishery by publicizing monthly harvest reports and biological data collection requirements, removing the confidentiality that currently shields catch data – including harvest locations, catch volumes, and fish size – from the public. This change reflects the need for transparency in the state’s menhaden fishery to more responsibly manage this critical public resource that supports Gulf predators and our coastal communities.

Act 444 by Rep. Jerome Zeringue (R-Houma) requires all menhaden vessels to use vessel tracking devices – this includes all motherships AND purse seine boats.

  • This law institutes a critical enforcement measure that requires each vessel in the menhaden fleet to use an AIS tracking system – essentially an onboard GPS that automatically broadcasts a vessel’s position, speed, and course – to help state officials and the public ensure complete compliance with fishing outside of the nearshore buffer zones. The industry has faced repeated claims from anglers over illegal fishing activity, through allowing its smaller purse seine boats to fish within buffer zones, since only the larger “motherships” used tracking devices previously.

TRCP thanks its legislative conservation champions in Louisiana, and all of you who have supported our efforts toward better Gulf menhaden management, and will continue to push for further improvements to the menhaden fishery – including moving toward an ecosystem-based management framework in the state to help protect gamefish populations.

Stay tuned for information about how you can weigh in on upcoming menhaden management decisions that will shape where the fishery is headed. Learn more about these small fish with a mighty purpose by visiting TRCP’s Forage Fish Recovery Page.

Banner image courtesy David Mangum

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June 3, 2026

Hunters, Anglers, and Conservation Groups Call on Senate to Strengthen the Conservation Reserve Program in 2026 Farm Bill

Sportsmen’s and conservation groups send letter to Senate Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry Committee urging long-overdue funding and updates for CRP as Farm Bill negotiations advance 

Today, 51 conservation and sportsmen’s organizations sent a letter to the Senate Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry Committee expressing strong support for the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) as the Committee prepares to consider a 2026 Farm Bill. Now in its 40th year, CRP is one of USDA’s flagship voluntary conservation programs and one of the most powerful tools available for creating and restoring the wildlife habitat that hunters and anglers depend on – while also delivering significant benefits for farmers, ranchers, wildlife, soil health, and water quality across the country. 

The letter urges the Committee to increase resources in the Farm Bill’s conservation title to deliver meaningful investment and improvements to CRP. Despite the program’s proven success and widespread popularity among producers and landowners, CRP has been operating under short-term extensions since 2023 and has not received substantive policy updates or new resources since the 2018 Farm Bill – even as Congress made historic investments in all other major Farm Bill conservation programs.  

“Habitat makes opportunity, and no USDA program creates more habitat that benefits both producers and hunters and anglers than the Conservation Reserve Program,” said Aaron Field, director of private lands conservation at the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership. “CRP has a long track record of supporting wildlife, improving water quality, and expanding access to quality hunting and fishing opportunities, while keeping working lands working. With a 2026 Farm Bill on the horizon, Congress has a clear opportunity to build on that record and ensure CRP has the resources it needs for its next 40 years.”   

Since its inception in 1985, CRP has served as a critical part of the farm safety net, helping producers and landowners manage risk, generate on-farm income, provide forage during extreme drought, and conserve environmentally sensitive lands. For hunters and anglers, the program is equally indispensable: CRP has restored millions of acres of wildlife habitat for pheasants, quail, waterfowl, whitetail deer, and dozens of other species, improved water quality in streams and rivers that support fisheries and helped support the $1.3 trillion outdoor recreation economy

The organizations expressed appreciation for the Committee’s bipartisan leadership on agricultural conservation and called on members to ensure CRP is not left behind as a Farm Bill moves forward.  Representing tens of millions of hunters, anglers, and outdoor enthusiasts, the organizations stated their commitment to working with the Committee to strengthen CRP, so it remains a valuable and effective option for producers, landowners, and sportsmen and women for the next 40 years and beyond. 

Read the letter HERE 


Learn more about the Conservation Reserve Program here, and if you are a landowner interested in enrolling, find your nearest USDA Service Center here

Learn more about Farm Bill Conservation Programs 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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