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22
Sep
2025
Categories: Chapter News, Federal Issues, State Issues
Tags: Public Lands & Waters, North American News, Alaska Chapter
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For decades, management here was guided by outdated plans from the 1980s and early ’90s.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.
Tags: Alaska Chapter, State Issues
Categories: Media, News, North American News, Press Releases
Tags: Press Releases, Access & Opportunity, North American News
At Backcountry Hunters & Anglers, we believe public lands are the cornerstone of our outdoor way of life. They belong to all of us, no matter where we live or what we earn. That is why we are standing against HB 4851, and why we are asking you to join us in defending the lands that make Michigan special.
Categories: Chapter News, Issues, State Issues
Tags: Michigan Chapter
Categories: State Issues
Tags:
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Categories: News, Chapter News, Federal Issues, State Issues
Tags: Access & Opportunity, North American News
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Tags: Press Releases, North American News
17
The U.S. Department of Agriculture is taking public comments on the proposal to rescind the 2001 Roadless Rule, which affects 45 million acres of our national forests. Why is this such a big deal? Why are we throwing this baby out with the bathwater?
Join Hal and Trout Unlimited President and CEO Chris Wood, who knows this subject inside and out and was working for the U.S. Forest Service in the late 1990s--when the Roadless Rule was created after decades of study, conflict, watershed failures, and the quest for both balance and fiscal responsibility in public lands’ management.
Categories: Media, Podcasts
Tags: media, Podcast
This is going to sound familiar and that’s because in December of 2024 we were successful in stopping the Michigan legislature from approving a $50 million dollar grant to the Copperwood mine. We need you to do it again! The Michigan legislature is currently considering a $50 million earmark to Wakefield Township for infrastructure for the Copperwood mine. If passed, this funding would pave the way for the mine to move forward, putting Lake Superior and our public lands at even greater risk. But there is still time to act. We urge you to join us in raising your voice against this dangerous proposal.
Categories: Chapter News, State Issues, Action Alerts
Tags: Michigan Chapter, Public Lands & Waters, Take Action, State Issues
16
The Atlantic striped bass was declared overfished in 2019, prompting the implementation of a rebuilding plan aimed at restoring the stock to its target spawning stock biomass by 2029.
Categories: News, Chapter News, Issues, State Issues
Tags: New Jersey Chapter, New York Chapter, Mid-Atlantic Chapter, New England Chapter, North Carolina Chapter, Pennsylvania Chapter