Most have seen the 2026 season setting proposals that have been put out for the FWP Commission meeting on December 4th. There is one elk-specific proposal that I hope folks find useful. It has to do with changes to units where elk are over objective and making some of the Elk B tags "Private Land Only," while still offering some Elk cow "Permits" available for public land hunting, which addresses those hunters who just want to hunt a cow elk.
We changed cow elk tags from a "Permt" draw system to an Elk B license about 20 years ago. The idea was that if access to tags was why we weren't killing enough elk to satisfy landowner tolerance, Elk B licenses would remove that tag constriction. The Elk B license idea failed to account for the immense amount of pressure it would add to public land cow elk hunting, which contributed to more elk being pushed to private land and the cow elk remaining on public land (the elk that weren't the problem) dying of lead poisoning. It also failed to account for how many non-residents would take advantage of this opportunity and add even more hunting pressure to the public lands.
I have been pushing the idea of reforming our cow elk system for eight years. To date, the Department has resisted, for reasons not well-explained of not explained at all. I suspect "institutional inertia" and fear of upsetting someone might create hesitancy to rock the boat.
Region 1 Commissioner, Ian Wargo, and I talked about this issue six years ago when he first read one of my proposals. At the time, he was not a Commissioner, rather a public land hunter who is passionate about chasing elk. Now that he is on the Commission, he is trying to address the issue of elk distribution and "shooting the wrong elk." He and I have talked about this issue for years and I think he is at a good starting point and he is open to adjustments that are helpful in the end goal - redistribute elk to where hunters are and not kill that few cow elk where the hunter pressure is most intense.
Commissioner Wargo has proposed an amendment to move the cow elk hunting pressure in some units to private land, which is where the complaints of too many elk persist. I asked him what the Department's response was to his proposal, knowing the Commissioners always seek FWP input on proposals to make sure they are biologically sound and not against some FWP policy. From what I gather, the Department has not responded to his amendment. When he and I talked about this in September, he told me he was submitting his proposal that week. To not have the Department's response or input this close to the Commission meeting is not good.
Many of us had supported the same change to antlerless deer tags in Regions 6 & 7, something that passed last year. That was against years of Department resistance. To date, I've not heard any complaints, other than from some non-residents who have complained that they weren't coming out this year because they didn't have private access to shoot does. Nobody has been able to explain to me why we can't do the same for cow elk in units where the problem is too many elk on private land and excess pressure on public land that further pushes elk to private land.
If you would like to see this change, or something similar to it, I'd ask that you email your Commissioner. I will provide the emails below. If you know your Commissioner, a phone call would be even more effective.
Commissioner Wargo has vetted this among a lot of public over the last few months. The response has been overwhelmingly positive. I worry that the Department is hoping to run out the clock by not providing their analysis to the proposal, and in doing this will not be part of the 2026 season structure.
I have attached the proposal as a PDF file to this post for you to read. It includes the current proposal and the justification for such.
If you can attend the meeting or chime in via Zoom, that would be great. At a minimum, if you support this change, please email your Commissioner(s). Given the Department has not supported or opposed this proposal, it is going to take the Commission forcing the Department to take action.
Region 1 - [email protected] (Ian Wargo)
Region 2 - [email protected] (Jeff Burrows)
Region 3 - [email protected] (Susan Kirby Brooke)
Region 4 - [email protected] (K.C. Walsh)
Region 5 - [email protected] (Brian Cebull)
Region 6 - [email protected] (Lesley Robinson, Commission Chair)
Region 7 - [email protected] (William Lane)
Commission Meeting Agenda and link to register to comment via Zoom - https://fwp.mt.gov/aboutfwp/commission/december-2025-meeting
We changed cow elk tags from a "Permt" draw system to an Elk B license about 20 years ago. The idea was that if access to tags was why we weren't killing enough elk to satisfy landowner tolerance, Elk B licenses would remove that tag constriction. The Elk B license idea failed to account for the immense amount of pressure it would add to public land cow elk hunting, which contributed to more elk being pushed to private land and the cow elk remaining on public land (the elk that weren't the problem) dying of lead poisoning. It also failed to account for how many non-residents would take advantage of this opportunity and add even more hunting pressure to the public lands.
I have been pushing the idea of reforming our cow elk system for eight years. To date, the Department has resisted, for reasons not well-explained of not explained at all. I suspect "institutional inertia" and fear of upsetting someone might create hesitancy to rock the boat.
Region 1 Commissioner, Ian Wargo, and I talked about this issue six years ago when he first read one of my proposals. At the time, he was not a Commissioner, rather a public land hunter who is passionate about chasing elk. Now that he is on the Commission, he is trying to address the issue of elk distribution and "shooting the wrong elk." He and I have talked about this issue for years and I think he is at a good starting point and he is open to adjustments that are helpful in the end goal - redistribute elk to where hunters are and not kill that few cow elk where the hunter pressure is most intense.
Commissioner Wargo has proposed an amendment to move the cow elk hunting pressure in some units to private land, which is where the complaints of too many elk persist. I asked him what the Department's response was to his proposal, knowing the Commissioners always seek FWP input on proposals to make sure they are biologically sound and not against some FWP policy. From what I gather, the Department has not responded to his amendment. When he and I talked about this in September, he told me he was submitting his proposal that week. To not have the Department's response or input this close to the Commission meeting is not good.
Many of us had supported the same change to antlerless deer tags in Regions 6 & 7, something that passed last year. That was against years of Department resistance. To date, I've not heard any complaints, other than from some non-residents who have complained that they weren't coming out this year because they didn't have private access to shoot does. Nobody has been able to explain to me why we can't do the same for cow elk in units where the problem is too many elk on private land and excess pressure on public land that further pushes elk to private land.
If you would like to see this change, or something similar to it, I'd ask that you email your Commissioner. I will provide the emails below. If you know your Commissioner, a phone call would be even more effective.
Commissioner Wargo has vetted this among a lot of public over the last few months. The response has been overwhelmingly positive. I worry that the Department is hoping to run out the clock by not providing their analysis to the proposal, and in doing this will not be part of the 2026 season structure.
I have attached the proposal as a PDF file to this post for you to read. It includes the current proposal and the justification for such.
If you can attend the meeting or chime in via Zoom, that would be great. At a minimum, if you support this change, please email your Commissioner(s). Given the Department has not supported or opposed this proposal, it is going to take the Commission forcing the Department to take action.
Region 1 - [email protected] (Ian Wargo)
Region 2 - [email protected] (Jeff Burrows)
Region 3 - [email protected] (Susan Kirby Brooke)
Region 4 - [email protected] (K.C. Walsh)
Region 5 - [email protected] (Brian Cebull)
Region 6 - [email protected] (Lesley Robinson, Commission Chair)
Region 7 - [email protected] (William Lane)
Commission Meeting Agenda and link to register to comment via Zoom - https://fwp.mt.gov/aboutfwp/commission/december-2025-meeting