Outdoor News Bulletin

Outdoor News Bulletin

June 2008 Edition | Volume 62, Issue 6 | Published since 1946

Germination of Conservation Fortunes in the New Farm Bill Remains Uncertain

After months of negotiations and several extensions of the 2002 legislation, Congress was finally able to craft a 2008 Farm Bill that garnered enough support on Capitol Hill to override the veto issued by the White House. As with most legislation similarly comprehensive, there are good points, and others not so good from a wildlife conservation perspective, according to the Wildlife Management Institute.

Read more >

Senate Committee Holds Hearing on OHV Use

During a June 5 hearing, the U.S. Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee reviewed the implications of increasing numbers of off-highway vehicle (OHV) users on public land, reports the Wildlife Management Institute. The panel listened to representatives from the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and U.S. Forest Service (USFS) discuss their plans to manage public land use to reduce the impacts of OHVs.

Read more >

Montana Offers, Then Defers, Energy Leases on Rocky Mountain Front

Montana was set to offer more than 800 acres of state land along the Rocky Mountain Front for oil and gas leases before pulling the offer at the last minute. The parcels, which included a 520-acre tract on the Blackleaf Wildlife Management Area, were expected to be offered during a June 10 lease sale before being granted a six-month deferral to look for alternatives, according to the Wildlife Management Institute.

Read more >

Worth Reading

Back in the Early Miocene, when I was pitted against higher education, literature research data were recorded on 3- by 5-inch notecards. The data could be organized topically or chronologically. Rarely was a student in that bleak Manual Typewriter Era able to accomplish arrangement both ways. I wasn't one of those savants. As evidenced by Manly Hardy (1832-1910): The Life and Writing of a Maine Fur-buyer, Hunter and Naturalist, neither was author William B. Krohn.

Read more >