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In the Spotlight

$1.5 Billion in Annual Economic Output Generated From Recreational Angling That Involves Atlantic Menhaden as Bait

As the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission prepares to set a new menhaden catch limit and considers whether to initiate a reallocation process among states, a new study shows that recreational anglers rely on this keystone species as one of the most important baitfish.

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June 24, 2026

America’s Forests Can’t Wait Another Fire Season. Congress Has a Fix. 

From prescribed fire to watershed protection: what the Fix Our Forests Act does for hunters and anglers

America’s forests are burning at a pace and scale that should give every hunter and angler pause. According to the National Interagency Fire Center’s May 2026 National Significant Wildland Fire Potential Outlook, as of April 30, 1,848,210 acres had burned across the country – 194% above average. Nearly 62% of the U.S. is now in drought, with conditions persisting, intensifying, or developing across much of the western U.S., High Plains, and Southeast. Looking ahead, NIFC projects above normal significant fire potential through the summer across an unusually broad geographic footprint: the Northwest, northern Great Basin, northern California, the Southwest, the Rocky Mountain Front Range, and much of the southern Gulf coast.  

But fire itself is not the enemy. Much of the American West and South is naturally fire-adapted, with forests and grasslands that evolved alongside frequent low – to moderate-intensity fire, which historically reduced excess vegetation, recycled nutrients, maintained some of the most productive wildlife habitat in the country. The crisis isn’t that forests burn. It’s that a century of widespread fire suppression, changing land management practices, expanding development, invasive species, and a changing climate have left many of those same forests choked with unnatural, dense fuel loads – turning a natural process into some of the catastrophic, habitat destroying wildfires we’re now seeing. 

For America’s hunters and anglers, the consequences of getting this wrong are not abstract.  They are lost seasons, degraded watersheds, and habitat that will take decades to recover. The challenge before Congress is not simply reducing fire – it is restoring healthier forests where beneficial fire can once again play its natural role while reducing catastrophic wildfires that threaten communities, fish and wildlife habitat, and outdoor recreation. 

The good news is that Congress is well on its way to passing legislation to combat this crisis. has already done much of the hard work to address this crisis. The Fix Our Forests Act (FOFA) passed the U.S. House of Representatives earlier in the 119th Congress and cleared the Senate Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry Committee by a 18-5 bipartisan vote last October. It is currently ready to be called to the Senate floor at any moment.   

The Fix Our Forests Act takes a comprehensive approach to the forest health and wildfire challenges that have been building for decades on our national forests. For hunters and anglers, the most consequential provisions are straightforward. Here are just a few: 

Accelerating on-the-ground restoration. 

For the first time in legislation, FOFA recognizes that projects to restore watersheds can reduce wildfire risk and protect drinking water sources for downstream communities. Land managers would be authorized to conduct restoration projects aimed at enhancing riparian and wet-meadow health in the newly designated “Fireshed Management Areas” under the bill. This win-win-win creates healthier habitat for fish and wildlife, more fire-resistant landscapes, and protects water supply for downstream communities.  

Expanding the use of prescribed fire. 

FOFA aims to make meaningful progress toward putting more “good fire” back on the landscape by strengthening the prescribed fire workforce, improving training and coordination among state, tribal, private, and federal practitioners, and reducing the barriers that have limited the safe use of prescribed burning. These investments would acknowledge what land managers have long understood.  

For hunters and anglers, more prescribed fire means healthier forests – stimulating new forage for elk and deer, improving habitat diversity for upland birds, and reducing the risk that future wildfires will severely damage the watersheds wild trout and salmon depend on. 

Protecting watersheds and downstream communities. 

Beyond improving watershed health in Fireshed Management Areas, FOFA would conserve and restore freshwater resources on other National Forest System Lands and nearby non-federal lands through reauthorizing the Water Source Protection Program and improving the Watershed Condition Framework. These programs identify and implement conservation and restoration efforts to improve water quality originating on U.S. Forest Service lands. Through these provisions, FOFA would expand critical public-private partnerships working to ensure that our National Forests provide clean water for communities, benefit agricultural producers, and safeguard fish and wildlife habitat that hunters and anglers rely on. 

Improving interagency coordination. 

Wildfire response today is too often hampered by fragmented data and slow coordination across the federal, state, tribal, and local agencies that share responsibility for fighting fires. FOFA addresses this by creating a national Wildfire Intelligence Center, which would generate and host real-time fire data and coordinate rapid interagency response. For hunters and anglers, faster, better-coordinated fire response means more public land stays accessible each season, and less prime fish and wildlife habitat is lost to fires that could have been contained earlier. 

Strengthening community resilience. 

FOFA would help communities become more resilient to wildfire by establishing a new interagency “Community Wildfire Risk Reduction Program” to better coordinate federal efforts to help communities prepare for, withstand, and recover from wildfires. The bill also strengthens and expands the Community Risk Reduction Program and makes improvements to existing grant programs while fostering cutting-edge research on wildfire and early detection technologies. These investments would help towns near national forests and other public lands better withstand and recover from wildfire – which matters to hunters and anglers, too: resilient gateway communities sustain the outfitters, access points, and local economies that depend on healthy public lands. 

The TRCP has long held that healthy national forests are foundational to quality hunting and fishing. Elk, mule deer, and pronghorn (and many other species) depend on the mosaic of open meadows, mixed conifer forests, and riparian corridors that characterize well-managed national forests. Trout and salmon depend on cold, clean water that forested watersheds provide. When forests are degraded, the hunting and fishing opportunities that millions of Americans enjoy suffers alongside them. 

The Fix Our Forests Act does not solve every challenge facing our national forests. The bill must be accompanied by adequate resources and agency capacity to put its tools to work. Legislation alone cannot substitute for a well-funded, well-staffed agency workforce – but the bill aims to lay critical groundwork that could meaningfully reduce the risk of catastrophic, landscape scale fires that have become increasingly common. 

Momentum for meaningful forest and wildfire policy has been building for years. The bipartisan support behind the Fix Our Forests Act – alongside backing from Western governors, state foresters, fire chiefs, conservation organizations, and other stakeholders – reflects a broad consensus that the status quo is no longer acceptable. While these groups may not agree on every aspect of forest management, they agree that the growing wildfire crisis demands action. Congress has an opportunity to build on that momentum and deliver lasting, science-based solutions before another fire season is upon us. 

TRCP urges the Senate to pass the Fix Our Forests Act before the close of the current legislative session. Every fire season that passes without action increases the risk of uncharacteristic wildfires that can devastate watersheds, fragment wildlife habitat, and cause long term closures on public lands that hunters and anglers have depended on for generations. The forests that make those days afield possible are counting on Congress to act. 

A path forward is in sight. It’s time to move.   

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June 23, 2026

In the Arena: Sandy Moret

TRCP’s “In the Arena” series highlights the individual voices of hunters and anglers who, as Theodore Roosevelt so famously said, strive valiantly in the worthy cause of conservation.

Sandy Moret

Hometown: Islamorada, Florida 
Occupation: Fly fishing school instructor, outfitter, and fly shop retailer
Conservation credentials: Moret is on the board of directors for Bonefish & Tarpon Trust, an organization for which he was a founding member, 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 Conservationist of the Year Award from Fly Fisherman magazine and the Lifetime Achievement Award from outdoor retailer Orvis for his work with the “Now or Neverglades” movement.

Originally hailing from Georgia, Moret moved to South Florida more than 50 years ago and quickly developed a passion for exploring the waters of the Keys and Everglades. Over the years, he became an expert at sight fishing for permit, bonefish, tarpon, and snook while learning alongside friends and mentors of the likes of legends such as Walker’s Cay Chronicles host Flip Pallot (Moret was also a guest angler on the show more than once) and renowned guide Steve Huff. He also has been featured on the Mill House Podcast. In the late ‘80s he founded the Florida Keys Fly Fishing School, which for three decades has continued to provide world-class instruction and ultimately led to the opening of Florida Keys Outfitters, a fly shop in Islamorada where Moret currently instructs. He has been the Grand Champion of the Florida Keys’ top fly fishing tournaments, the Gold Cup Tarpon Tournament and the Islamorada Invitational Bonefish Fly Championship, a combined eight times.

Here is his story.

Photo Credit: Dave Robinson

I grew up in Atlanta, where my dad encouraged access to nearby bass fishing and quail hunting. On holidays the family would drive down to Crystal River on Florida’s Gulf Coast to fish for trout, mackerel, and redfish with live shrimp below our popping corks. If waterfowl season was open, we could hunt ducks as well. I vividly remember riding out the river in Captain Robby Edge’s boat and staring through the clear water. I was mesmerized seeing every blade of grass, redfish, crab, and bass on the bottom as we sped by. There were tens of thousands of ducks, coots, and wading birds in the basins. It was truly a paradise.

I moved to Miami for a business opportunity in 1972 and subsequently met Flip Pallot. He mentored me in the wonders of South Florida’s Everglades from the Keys, Biscayne and Florida Bays up to Lake Okeechobee and the Kissimmee River. I learned firsthand how the interconnected segments created the “River of Grass.”

My first bonefish trip with Flip was to Elliots Key across Biscayne Bay. We began wading on the ocean side at dead low tide. As the tide began rising, bonefish returned, swimming, pushing, and tailing along the shoreline. They came in pairs, small groups, and herds. Excitement made me shake so I could hardly cast and spooked several. One came up so shallow its back was out. Flip put a fly just ahead of the fish and as it approached, he twitched the fly. The fish humped up on the fly and tore away for 80 yards. I was hooked.

Photo Credit: Erick Dent/Vineyard Vines Corporate

If you told me I could fish anywhere in the world I wanted, I would still be right where I am in Islamorada, on Florida Bay’s half-million acres at the bottom of the Florida Everglades! Where else could you fish for sailfish, tuna, mahi, bonefish, permit, tarpon, snook, redfish, and black bass in the same day? You can fish over the myriad flats and basins of the Bay. You can run out to the reef or Gulfstream, or into the inland freshwater ponds and canals for bass.

“Each generation seems to be slipping farther away from the natural world and more dependent on digital developments, mechanical conveniences, and a synthetic lifestyle.”

I believe conservation is critical for humans to maintain a connection with our natural world, to feel the need to protect those resources. If people do not spend outdoor time with nature, it becomes easy to lose touch with the air, water, vegetation, and animals we share the planet with. Each generation seems to be slipping farther away from the natural world and more dependent on digital developments, mechanical conveniences, and a synthetic lifestyle. 

Photo Credit: Steve Huff

The weight of humanity is heavy on Florida’s water quantity and quality. Unbridled development, golf courses, subdivisions, and agricultural runoff contribute to massive losses of green space and continued degradation of our water quality. Since I moved to Florida over 50 years ago, the population has grown from 7.5 million to 23.5 million residents. At any given time, there are an additional half-a-million tourists as well. Industries favoring strong growth advocacy have controlled our legislators’ governance to the detriment of the environment for decades.

As Florida’s population has grown at a rate of a thousand new residents a day, the impact of human activities has compounded our environmental problems. Most newcomers from the past several decades have little or no understanding or connection to natural Florida and to the importance of the Everglades system to our ability to live on this flat, low-lying peninsula.

Photo Credit: Greg Poland

Based on solid science and common sense, the EPA and our legislators began creating environmentally sound laws and regulations from the mid ‘60s through recent years as Atlanta, L.A., Denver, and many urban areas developed massive overhead domes of haze. While South Florida’s air has generally been cleaner, we deal primarily with problems related to water. The Florida Keys have completed removal of all septic tanks and converted to central sewer. But our reefs are collapsing, and much of our marine life contains excessive amounts of mercury and human pharmaceuticals flushed into the system. Algae blooms continue to create seagrass die-offs, robbing our gamefish of quality habitat.

Recent legislative and regulatory attempts to abort protective measures and ignore conclusions drawn from solid science have become all too common. As stakeholders, whether anglers, hunters, photographers, hikers, or other users of our resources, we must be aggressive, outspoken, and insistent on maintaining and increasing protective measures well into the future. Otherwise, we will face a significant deterioration in the quality of life for everyone.

Banner image credit: David Mangum


June 18, 2026

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

Bipartisan budget approved for 2027 after weeks of negotiations between state lawmakers and the Governor

After a challenging negotiation period, the Arizona State Legislature and Governor Hobbs agreed on a budget for the next fiscal year which includes some major wins for the hunting and fishing community and highlights avenues for future state investment in water and habitat conservation for fish and wildlife. Here’s a quick rundown.

Funds for Fisheries, Wildlife Crossings  

One of the greatest wins in this year’s budget was the approval of $11.55 million to improve and modernize fish hatcheries throughout the state. The Arizona Game and Fish Department will use these funds to repair critical fish hatchery infrastructure and install technologies which will improve water use efficiency, prevent disease in hatchery populations, and increase fish production. The outcome of this investment will result in more healthy fish stocked in the state’s fishing ponds, streams, rivers, and lakes, bolstering rural economies and improving opportunities for Arizona anglers for generations to come.

In a separate win for wildlife connectivity, $700,000 was included in the state budget for wildlife crossing implementation and planning, which will improve habitat connectivity and increase motorist safety. Additionally, the Arizona Department of Forestry and Fire Management (DFFM) was allocated $10 million for wildfire suppression funding. This funding will also help address the need for vegetative fuels mitigation to improve forest and watershed health.

In a tight budget year, several other wins came in the form of avoiding cuts to critical departments that support natural resource protection, such as the Arizona Department of Water Resources and DFFM.

Action for Water Protection, but Room for Further Funding  

Given the dire state of decreasing water levels in the Colorado River Basin, the West facing one of the lowest snowpacks on record, projected high wildfire risk this season, and ongoing drought, further financial commitment by the state to protect water supplies and fish and wildlife habitat is now more crucial than ever.

With ongoing negotiations among the seven Colorado River states, there was a notable budget win for water, with $20 million allocated for the Water Supply Development Revolving Fund and an additional $9.5 million water quality fee fund deposit to the Water Infrastructure Finance Authority. Yet given the extreme drought conditions across the Basin, there is more work to be done.

A recent poll highlighted the ongoing water shortage crisis as the number-one issue of importance for Arizona voters. Despite this, several proposed budget items, such as creating a Colorado River Protection Fund (which the poll also indicated was strongly supported by voters) and funds for invasive salt cedar removal in riparian areas, which both had the potential to safeguard water and habitat resources in the state, were left out in budget negotiations.

The federal government has recently made its position clear: Addressing the effects of drought on Colorado River water supplies and Arizona’s economy must be a shared financial responsibility. Federal funding is likely available in the near term to assist Arizona water users to respond to drought, and as a path forward, Arizona should reduce its water usage and commit to durable solutions to address the Colorado River crisis in partnership with the other Basin states. Investing state dollars toward Colorado River water conservation is a viable avenue for establishing a good-faith water reduction plan while encouraging the other Basin states to do the same.

Looking Ahead  

We can all celebrate the wins of this state budget cycle, but rest assured that TRCP will continue to urge decision makers to invest state resources to protect the land and waters we all depend on.

Senate Advances America the Beautiful Act, Aiming to Renew Critical Funding for Public Lands  

Reauthorization of the Legacy Restoration Fund would mean better access and infrastructure for America’s hunters and anglers 

Yesterday, hunters, anglers, and outdoor enthusiasts joined the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership in commending the Senate Environment & Natural Resources Committee for unanimously re-authorizing the National Parks and Public Land Legacy Restoration Fund (LRF) through the America the Beautiful Act (S.1547).  

 The bipartisan legislation was introduced in the Senate by Senator Steve Daines (R-Mont.), Senator Angus King (I-ME), and 63 Senate co-sponsors and is aimed at addressing the $43 billion maintenance backlog on America’s public lands across several federal agencies.  

“The America the Beautiful Act wouldn’t just fund maintenance on our national parks, forests, and refuges – it would require federal agencies to prioritize public access. That means better water infrastructure on refuges for waterfowl hunters, passable trails for turkey and big game hunters, and improved access points for anglers,” said Joel Webster, chief conservation officer at the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership. “TRCP joins sportsmen and women in thanking Senators Daines and King for their leadership in introducing this bipartisan legislation and the efforts of Senators Lee and Heinrich in moving it through the Senate Environment and Natural Resources Committee.”

The Legacy Restoration Fund was originally established in 2020 through the Great American Outdoors Act, a landmark bipartisan conservation bill. The fund expired in 2025, leaving a critical gap in addressing the $43 billion maintenance backlog on America’s public lands. With the reauthorization provided by the America the Beautiful Act, the Legacy Restoration Fund would deliver $1.9 billion annually over the next five years to rebuild the roads, trails, campgrounds, staff housing, and ADA-accessible infrastructure that hunters, anglers, and all public lands users depend on. 

The America the Beautiful Act now heads to the Senate floor for a full vote before moving to the House and ultimately to the President’s desk.  

The Only Way is Forward

TRCP communications manager Noah Davis shares how exploring a new creek parallels the path of conservation work

My dad and I haven’t waded this far up the creek before. The rising cutthroats keep pulling us higher. At every stretch that looks a little shallow, at every chance we could scramble up out of the water, we see another pool that makes us forget how far we already have to hike out, the plans we made back in town, and the desire to fish the big river that evening.

The pools are dug into the rock or deepen in front of logjams. The water is clear and colored by the red and blue stones that cobble the bottom. Currents welcome our flies and float them gently to the trout that wait to strike at the depth change. The white posts of our parachute flies disappear in white splashes and we are tied to trout after trout.

It reaches the point that when a drift goes uninterrupted, our eyebrows raise and we look at each other in surprise.

The start of the canyon.

“Not good enough for them, huh?” I say as Dad false casts.

“Getting picky all of a sudden.” He lays down an offering that is accepted quickly.

“I guess not that picky yet!”

The cutthroats are healthy and beautiful. Their oranges slashes flash and the many spots on their tails shimmer as we release them. The water is cold enough for us to shake our hands after submersions, but the air is warm enough that we feel comfortable wet wading.

I’ve long felt that when entering public lands, whatever I carry—rod, rifle, or bucket for berries or mushrooms—is a kind of key. We as Americans are blessed with hundreds of millions of acres of federal public lands where the only admission is the wheels, hooves, or boots to reach them. Once we arrive, these mountains, prairies, creeks, canyons, and lakes offer more than a lifetime of experiences. The tools we carry can unlock them.

My favorite mule deer ridge was found because I was carrying a rifle. I discovered the sweetest huckleberries I’ve ever tasted because I was chasing early season dusky grouse. My go-to morel patch is along a stream where brown trout nail streamers in the high, spring water. What we love to do helps us fall deeper in love with the places that offer us these opportunities.

The higher we climb, the steeper the walls become, until finally we are in a canyon. Dad wades back a hundred yards then scales a spring seep to look ahead. When he returns, he says he can’t see how long it goes.

“No reason to leave these fish,” I say.

“Just means we’re committed,” he replies.

We wade up and turn the corner. Suddenly we are fully blocked in. We know the way down, but the way up is a mystery, fresh fish and undisturbed pools are all ahead.

A healthy cutthroat trout moments before release.

I bow-and-arrow my purple haze on the far side of a run and a cutthroat comes up from between two large stones to porpoise on the fly. It’s a take that gives the angler all the advantage. The fish goes down on the fly while the angler pulls up on the line and the two competing directions usually result in a set hook and a fighting fish.

When the trout comes to hand, the belly is heavy and I look around and see dozens of stonefly shucks clinging weightlessly to the rock walls. I release the cutthroat back into the pool and wonder when the last time the fish saw a human.

We continue to pick up trout, and the sky narrows above us. The world feels funneled here and Dad and I are following the canyon as if we were bobsledders following the track.

“How much longer do you think?” I ask.

“Your guess is as good as mine,” Dad says, again prepping to cast.

“I think we’re too far in to turn back now.”

“Only way to go is forward. We’ll see how long it takes.”

We as Americans are blessed with hundreds of millions of acres of federal public lands where the only admission is the wheels, hooves, or boots to reach them.

How do we reach the elk in the morning? How do we hike to the lake to hit the bass bite in the evening? How do we get out of a canyon? It’s the same way that we safeguard our public access and public lands: one step in front of the other, moving forward.

TRCP is made up of dedicated hunters and anglers who direct their passions for chasing deer, pheasants, ducks, redfish, and stripers into their work for conservation. They know that success doesn’t happen in a day, and that the work to guarantee all Americans quality places to hunt and fish is a long-term mission but still understand that every step counts.

And that’s why we need all hunters and anglers to be involved in speaking up for the public lands and waters that make our passions possible. Sign up for our weekly newsletter below to stay updated on conservation news and opportunities to engage with decisions that influence where you hunt and fish.

The only way is forward.

Two hours later, we arrive in a flat blooming with beargrass. The canyon is behind us, and an old horse trail is visible crossing the creek.

“I think it will be quicker getting out than getting in,” Dad says.

I look upstream and see a small falls digging a pool. The light is slanting, but I think we still have an hour of light left. Our headlamps have batteries.

“I think I want to try that pool up there. Three casts at most.”


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