Trump Backs New Hunting Access to 92 million acres

Shoutout to Wyomingite - Brian Nesvik, for actually being the one in the "Trump Admin" that's leading the charge on opening up more NWRs for hunting and fishing. But I'll play here on the broader conversation.

To @Steve O 's point, sometimes more access and kill good hunting, but it's also a case-by-case basis. But ultimately that gives state wildlife agencies the discretion to manage for hunting on these places. Depending on the state or species, that could be a positive or negative. For instance, there are BLM and BOR reservoirs in Wyoming not allowed to waterfowl hunt to just provide a little sanctuary, and that makes for better waterfowling in the surrounding area by keeping birds around longer.

Looking at the factual scorecard that some folks in here have asked for, this administration is largely defined by supporting hunting and 2A, but prioritizing development over long-term habitat connectivity.

Here are a few of the big ones I've paid attention to:
Dec. 22, 2025 - Proposed roll back of sage-grouse protections for more development. Positive for our oil and gas production, negative for sagebrush country.

May 11, 2026 - Officially rescinded the 2024 Public Lands Rule which gave conservation a stronger footing as a legitimate use in the "multi-use mandate" on federal public lands. Again, possibly positive for our gas prices, negative for sagebrush country.

Currently - Administration is working on rolling back the 2001 Roadless Rule. This would to eliminate blanket prohibitions on road construction, reconstruction, and timber harvesting across approximately 45 million acres of National Forest System lands. Possible benefit for managing national forest better (if we can fund the management, or if lumber prices get high enough to bring back local mills & loggers). Possible negative for those of us hunters who specifically look for roadless areas to get into better hunting.

At face value, the Administration itself does not have a heavy-hand in public lands sell-off proposals. It's Congressional representatives like Sen. Mike Lee leading the charge there in the Legislative Branch, not the Executive Branch. The amount those two things are in cahoots is a different deep dive, but you would hav to point the finger at Congressional members and not the Trump Admin for the hard facts of public land sell-off, like Sen. Mike Lee's amendment in the Big Beautiful Bill.

Hope that's what you were looking for @MtnW
 
Trump is a ego maniac ( I voted for him) but….that being said
Anyone thinks our country was better off with the previous administration’s brain dead 💀 dementia ridden commander and chief and the word salad cackling VP Harris and their batch of empowered freaks is beyond reality to the outdoorsman I hang with.

You think the previous administration and Obama’s ,John Kerry’s Green New Deal, and sponsorship of Iran , that he rammed down our throats was good for our environment, safety, economy , our children’s future, and forcing the USA reliance on shit hole unfriendly countries that are our enemies for our energy and resources?

You liked the previous administration’s open borders and the invasion of unvetted third world illegals who do not want to assimilate to our society?

You think the WOKE governments established in places like Colorado , Oregon, Minnesota , etc.etc.etc. Fill in the blanks is a better tradeoff? Not to mention the communist mayor of our largest city.

The previous administration is powered by the biggest bunch of screwball’s, my previous wild dreams would never have imagined.
Like I said I voted for him 3 times.



What campaign promises has he kept?

What happened to:

  • the DOGE checks
  • tariff checks
  • 10% APR on credit cards
  • meds being 1500% cheaper
  • $2 gas
  • the Epstein files
  • reopening the Strait of Hormus that was already open
  • cheaper groceries
  • ending wars in 24 hours
  • the "privately funded" ballroom




Saying Kamala would be worse is a total cop out. Don’t think like the “sheep” you love to call out, hold the guy accountable to what he promised.
 
Shoutout to Wyomingite - Brian Nesvik, for actually being the one in the "Trump Admin" that's leading the charge on opening up more NWRs for hunting and fishing. But I'll play here on the broader conversation.

To @Steve O 's point, sometimes more access and kill good hunting, but it's also a case-by-case basis. But ultimately that gives state wildlife agencies the discretion to manage for hunting on these places. Depending on the state or species, that could be a positive or negative. For instance, there are BLM and BOR reservoirs in Wyoming not allowed to waterfowl hunt to just provide a little sanctuary, and that makes for better waterfowling in the surrounding area by keeping birds around longer.

Looking at the factual scorecard that some folks in here have asked for, this administration is largely defined by supporting hunting and 2A, but prioritizing development over long-term habitat connectivity.

Here are a few of the big ones I've paid attention to:
Dec. 22, 2025 - Proposed roll back of sage-grouse protections for more development. Positive for our oil and gas production, negative for sagebrush country.

May 11, 2026 - Officially rescinded the 2024 Public Lands Rule which gave conservation a stronger footing as a legitimate use in the "multi-use mandate" on federal public lands. Again, possibly positive for our gas prices, negative for sagebrush country.

Currently - Administration is working on rolling back the 2001 Roadless Rule. This would to eliminate blanket prohibitions on road construction, reconstruction, and timber harvesting across approximately 45 million acres of National Forest System lands. Possible benefit for managing national forest better (if we can fund the management, or if lumber prices get high enough to bring back local mills & loggers). Possible negative for those of us hunters who specifically look for roadless areas to get into better hunting.

At face value, the Administration itself does not have a heavy-hand in public lands sell-off proposals. It's Congressional representatives like Sen. Mike Lee leading the charge there in the Legislative Branch, not the Executive Branch. The amount those two things are in cahoots is a different deep dive, but you would hav to point the finger at Congressional members and not the Trump Admin for the hard facts of public land sell-off, like Sen. Mike Lee's amendment in the Big Beautiful Bill.

Hope that's what you were looking for @MtnW
Great post and appreciate the real on-topic thoughts and food for thought. Hopefully this thread can avoid just being another blue vs red political pissing match.
 
At face value, the Administration itself does not have a heavy-hand in public lands sell-off proposals.
This is my opinion on it as well. Trump doesn’t seem to care that much about the issue of public land sell-offs, but when he’s pushed on it he actually seems fairly moderate.

Extractive use of public lands? Different story. This administration is really big on that.

But since some powerful pro-extraction politicians are also pro-selloff, the anti-public lands movement does seem to have significant influence at the moment
 
a post about opening up land to hunting and the usual crap about Trump “bad”

folks didn’t even read the summary- instead they just went to the usual habit of their Trump gripes. it’s pretty sad.

I don’t trust most conservation organizations anymore after watching the entire country get covered in solar and wind and then sitting silent. Then complaining about extraction projects. I can’t buy it, to much hypocrisy for me.
 
It is possible to object to some things an administration does without being against the administration as a whole. People need to hold their leaders accountable to help direct future policy. For instance, I typically vote republican but I make my voice heard to some in the party when they step on things that matter to me.

Our country used to be full of people who had individual beliefs and stood for what they believed in, not a political party. I really hope we can get back there some day.
 
Sure. I work in the wildlife profession and have seen what the federal cuts have done to the workforce that are actually doing the important research and implementation work to better our natural resources. This could be federally funded projects like elk, mule deer, clearing trail, wildfire (or better yet forest management), fisheries,.. Think of all the orgs we support that don’t rely on big donors and need grants for research for the things we love to hunt.

The cut of funding is one thing. Resinding the Roadless rule, Amber Road, The Boundary Waters, transfer/selling of public lands, taking away the public comment period, or the same poor taste-accepting public comments that over 90% opposed to such things and move forward anyways to better their agenda.

@Team4LongGun I hope I gave you some of the negatives I see. Fact vs opinions is a blurred thing.

I’m just a man that loves nothing more than being outside doing the things I love.
Appreciate your response. I was not aware of those things. The lack of forest management in my neck of the woods has greatly changed the landscape-hunting and trapping for the worse.
 
a post about opening up land to hunting and the usual crap about Trump “bad”

folks didn’t even read the summary- instead they just went to the usual habit of their Trump gripes. it’s pretty sad.

I don’t trust most conservation organizations anymore after watching the entire country get covered in solar and wind and then sitting silent. Then complaining about extraction projects. I can’t buy it, to much hypocrisy for me.

Once you understand that they both suck, life gets easier.
 
I work in a wildlife profession as well and generally see this as a net negative as well. NWR’s were literally established by one of the greatest conservationists and hunters this county has seen (T Roosevelt) to provide “inviolate sanctuary” for migratory birds and waterfowl. Those sanctuaries have proven themselves critical to maintaining quality numbers of waterfowl nearby many of our public and private hunting areas. The acquisition of many of those NWR’s was funded by the purchase of federal duck stamps by hunters who (knowingly or not) were investing in that network of waterfowl sanctuaries that provide those necessary duck sources for hunters. I don’t see undoing the visions of our conservation leaders and the investment by ourselves and our predecessors as a good thing.

There is a pretty good volume of scientific research backing the role that these refuges play in maintaining quality regional duck hunting, and if anything duck hunters need more unhunted refuges, not fewer (google “Cohen Lab”).

Not to mention the huge black eye that opening these sanctuaries is giving hunters with the general public.
 
In case you want to dig deeper, comment, or see what is proposed for your local refuge:

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has formally opened and is now accepting public comments for the 2026-2027 hunt and fish rule-making cycle. You may find station-specific proposed plans and assessments posted in the Federal Register (Docket No. FWS–HQ–NWRS–2026–1223) or at https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2026-10465.
The Midwest Region is accepting comments on proposed changes to the hunt and fish programs and regulations that include 36 national wildlife refuges, wetland management districts, and national fish hatcheries. These proposed actions are intended to expand hunting and fishing recreational activities, reduce regulatory burden, improve hunters’ and anglers’ experiences on U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service lands and waters, and are in support of Secretary’s Order No. 3447 and subsequent Director’s Order No. 233.
Please submit formal comments via the Federal Register (Docket No. FWS–HQ–NWRS–2026–1223).
 
I've always wondered how effective refuges are for migratory waterfowl populations. Obviously numbers are much higher now than 100 years ago, but I tend to think the cessation of market hunting did more for the birds than banning hunting altogether in so many wetlands...

Does it make more sense to hyper concentrate hunting pressure in the immediate periphery or spread it out and let the birds utilize habitat as they see fit...I don't have the answer but looks like we are about to find out
 
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