This New Rule Deals Another Serious Blow to Fish Habitat and Wetlands
While the conservation world focused on the Great American Outdoors Act, the administration quietly limited the states’ authority to protect water quality.
While the conservation world focused on the Great American Outdoors Act, the administration quietly limited the states’ authority to protect water quality.
Changes to a bedrock conservation law threaten to put blinders on federal decision-makers.
A look back at why EPA’s rollback doesn’t hold water.
Watch the video and sign up to stay informed on issues that affect outdoor recreation in the Colorado River Basin.
Western states take another important step toward stabilizing the Colorado River.
A brief history of the Clean Water Act and how an EPA rule could strip many streams and wetlands of its protection.
There’s tremendous demand for landscape-scale water conservation projects that involve farmers, ranchers, urban communities, and sportsmen—now, the program that makes these projects possible could see a boost in the 2018 Farm Bill.
Restoration work on waterfront habitat did almost as much to revive the community as it did to improve conditions for fishing.
It may be “America’s hardest working river,” but the drought-hammered Colorado River can’t support current demand from cities, farms, and fisheries without collaborative conservation.
The precipitous drop in hunter participation should be a call to action for all sportsmen and women, because it will have a significant ripple effect on key conservation funding models.
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