Media

Welcome to BHA’s new website! This digital campfire is still being built—thanks for bearing with us as we get it burning bright.

Media

10

Oct

2025

Win Your Own Adipose Drift Boat and Trailer and Support Conservation!

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9

Oct

2025

Nebraska Chapter October 2025 Update

Author: Brian Bird
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8

Oct

2025

Congressional Review Act Sets Dangerous Precedent for Public Lands

Author: Nadia Marji
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1

Oct

2025

Backcountry Hunters & Anglers: Federal Shutdown Compounds Threats to Public Lands

Author: Nadia Marji
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29

Sep

2025

Hunting for Sustainability Opened the Door and Conservation Made Me Stay

I didn’t grow up hunting. Back in Minnesota, it always felt like something other people did to embrace the cooling temps and an excuse to sit in a deer stand and drink beer all day. Not me....Still, I struggled to take the leap on my own. I had always been the curious observer tagging along—helping prep gear, mapping hunts on OnX, waterproofing tents, packing food—yet never the hunter. That’s when I discovered Backcountry Hunters & Anglers’ Hunting for Sustainability program: a chance to finally step into the role I’d been circling for a few years.

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Categories: Chapter News

Tags: Utah Chapter

29

Sep

2025

Support for HB 1811: Remove the cap on PGC land acquisition $$

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26

Sep

2025

2025 Public Lands and Waters Photo Contest

Taking pictures of our backcountry experiences is just one way hunters and anglers capture their most beloved memories in designated wilderness, on Bureau of Land Management tracts, Forest Service parcels, and on public waters in between. And we want to see your pics! Our winners will take home over $8,900 in prizes from partners like Savage, Simms, Fishpond, Seek Outside, Benchmade, Sitka, First Lite, Walton’s, Irish Setter, Grundens, NRS, and more!

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23

Sep

2025

The North American Pronghorn Foundation

The American pronghorn is North America’s most unique big game animal, a Great Plains living relic from the end of the Ice Age—a creature of speed, agility and beauty that once shared the landscape with the American cheetah, lions, dire wolves, steppe bison.

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Categories: Media, Podcasts

Tags: media, Podcast

22

Sep

2025

The Value of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge as Public Land for Hunting and Fishing

Author: Mary Glaves
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22

Sep

2025

Central Yukon Resource Management Plan: Alaskans Deserve Stewardship, Not Political Shortcuts

Author: Mary Glaves

Central Yukon Resource Management Plan:

Alaskans Deserve Stewardship, Not Political Shortcuts

 

The Central Yukon Resource Management Plan (CYRMP) covers 56 million acres in northern Alaska—13.3 million managed by the Bureau of Land Management. This is not just empty ground; it’s the Yukon River watershed, the Dalton Highway corridor, and lands that sustain local communities, hunters, anglers, and Alaska’s economy. It also includes areas tied directly to national energy infrastructure and military readiness. In short, it matters.

For decades, management here was guided by outdated plans from the 1980s and early ’90s. After more than ten years of work, extensive consultation, and $6.7 million in taxpayer investment, the new plan was finalized in late 2024. The CYRMP balances habitat necessary for hunting, fishing, and trapping, subsistence, recreation, and responsible development. It gives certainty to communities, businesses, and agencies operating in one of the most remote and challenging landscapes in America.

Now, Congress is considering rolling it back using the Congressional Review Act (CRA). That may sound like a quick fix, but in practice it would waste millions of dollars, undo years of public engagement, and throw Alaskans back into regulatory limbo. Worse, under the CRA, BLM couldn’t issue a “substantially similar” plan in the future without a new act of Congress. That’s not efficiency—it’s paralysis.

Alaskans deserve better. If there are genuine concerns with the CYRMP, the Bureau of Land Management already has a process to revise or amend these plans. That system requires public input, tribal consultation, and coordination with state and local governments. It’s not perfect, but it’s the right way to ensure all voices are heard and tax dollars aren’t wasted.

Scrapping the plan through the CRA would set a dangerous precedent, politicizing land management and sidelining Alaska’s interests in favor of Washington gridlock. The CYRMP may not please everyone, but it provides clarity and balance. At its core, it reflects Alaskan values: responsible use of resources, respect for tradition, and passing on healthy lands and strong opportunities to the next generation.

Alaska needs durable land management.

 

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