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June 2026
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May 2026 Re-cap6/3/2026 Reminder - The New Mexico Dept. of Game and Fish has now officially changed their name to the New Mexico Department of Wildlife. Moving forward NMCOG will refer to the Department as the NMDOW or the Dept. of Wildlife (as opposed to NMDGF or Game & Fish). Likewise, the NM Game Commission is now called the NM Wildlife Commission. The NM Wildlife Commission hosted a meeting on Thursday May 28th in Socorro. They began finalizing some of the big game rules. The remainder of the open rules will be finalized at the Commission meetings between June and November. The Commission unanimously approved the changes to the Turkey and Javelina Rules at this meeting. The Elk and Deer Rule proposals were NOT discussed during the May meeting. As a reminder, this year the Commission will be revising all their big game rules (except for predators) for the next 4yr rule cycle. You can find information on the proposed changes to the rules that have already opened at Proposals Under Consideration - NMDGF. APPROVAL OF THE JAVELINA RULE The Commission voted unanimously to approve the below changes to the Javelina Rule. These changes will be in effect for the next 4-year rule cycle 2027-2030. You can view the final changes to the rule, including date changes, HERE. The Javelina Rule is now closed for public comment.
APPROVAL OF THE TURKEY RULE The Commission voted unanimously to approve the below changes to the Turkey Rule. These changes will be in effect for the next 4-year rule cycle 2027-2030. You can view the final changes to the rule, including date changes, HERE. The Turkey Rule is now closed for public comment.
SUBSEQUENT DISCUSSION OF THE BIGHORN SHEEP RULE The Department provided their subsequent (or second) presentation regarding the bighorn sheep rule. Proposed changes to the rule are as follows. This rule is currently open for public comment and will be finalized in August. Please send your comments to [email protected]
SUBSEQUENT DISCUSSION OF THE PRONGHORN RULE The Dept. provided an updated presentation on the status of pronghorn statewide. According to the Dept. pronghorn populations are stable statewide but have been negatively impacted over the past 4 years by weather, disease, predation, and availability of forage/concealment cover. Fortunately, pronghorns tend to rebound very quickly, and the Dept. is not overly concerned about populations. However, they are proposing some changes that will minimize any potential additive mortality caused by hunters. You can view the Dept. presentation HERE. Presentation begins at 1:37.42 The Dept. is proposing the following changes to the rule. The rule is currently open for public comment. Email your comments to [email protected]
GENERAL PROPOSED CHANGES TO APPLY TO ALL BIG GAME RULE The Dept. is requesting the following changes for all big game rules
Next Commission Meeting June 25th in Portales, NM
You are always welcome and encouraged to reach out to the Commission with your comments. Include the following addresses anytime you send an email to the above public comment portals. [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected]
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March 2026 Re-cap3/24/2026 The NM Wildlife Commission held a meeting in Albuquerque on Friday March 20th. The majority of the meeting was focused on the “subsequent discussions” for next 4 years of the Javelina, Turkey, Migratory Bird, and Exotics Rules. Subsequent Discussion is the last opportunity for public input and Commission directive (to the Dept.) prior to the Final Hearing when the Commission approves the amendments to the Rule. The Final Hearing is almost always just a formality. This is because, by law, the Rule must be on the NM register (Sunshine Portal) for 30days unchanged prior to approval. Thus, if the Commission decides to change anything during the Final Hearing the Rule must go back out for public comment. Therefore, the Commission never makes changes to the “Final Rule”.
All that to say that changes explained below are highly likely to be what the Commission approves for the next 4-year cycle of the following Rules. Public comment is still open for the following Rules but not for much longer. So, if you feel strongly about something you MUST reach out to the Commission now. Send your comment to the individual email address. And include the Commissioner addresses in your comment. Commissioner mail addresses are as follows: [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] SUBSEQUENT DISCUSSION OF THE JAVELINA RULE The Dept. is seeing Javelina populations expand across the state. Biologists have finalized population data but are proposing the following changes to the rule.
The rule is now open for public comment. If you would like to voice your opinion on this rule, please email [email protected] SUBSEQUENT DISCUSSION OF THE TURKEY RULE Dept. data shows that turkey populations statewide are steady. Season dates continue to be consistent with breeding objectives and success rates from hunters have remained steady over the past decade. The Dept. is proposing the following changes to the rule.
The Turkey Rule is now open for public comment. If you would like to voice your opinion on this rule, please email [email protected] SUBSEQUENT DISCUSSION OF THE MIGRATORY RULE The Migratory Bird Rule is updated annually, and season selections and bag limits are determined in conjunction with the US Fish and Wildlife Service working through the Central and Pacific Flyway Councils. Proposed changes are as follows:
The rule is now open for public comment. If you would like to voice your opinion on this rule, please email [email protected] SUBSEQUENT DISCUSSION OF THE EXOTICS RULE The Department regulatory framework for Barbary Sheep, Oryx, and Ibex is called the Exotics Rule. Because these game species are non-native to New Mexico they are managed under different strategies. The rule is now open for public comment. If you would like to voice your opinion on this rule, please email [email protected] IBEX Ibex populations are restricted to the Florida Mountains through an agreement with the BLM. In 2013 the Dept. was under pressure from BLM to significantly reduce the Ibex population. Admittedly the Dept culled too deeply, and population numbers have continued to decline since then for reasons unclear to the Dept. Current Ibex number are extremely low and trophy quality of Billies is terrible. Although the Dept. does not believe that hunter harvest is a factor in the current decline, they feel a large reduction in licenses is warranted. NMCOG wholeheartedly agrees and has encouraged the Dept. to reduce license numbers to a few as humanly possible until the population stabilizes. The Dept. conducted a thermal imaging study on the population in March which resulted in a count of 101 Ibex present on the mountain. Yes, this number is very low but it’s important to remember that the population began in 1964 with a total of 3 female and 1 male. So, not all hope is lost. Hunting licenses has been reduced to minimal levels for 2026 and proposed changes for the next 4-year rule cycle are as follows:
ORYX Oryx management is focused on populations located on White Sands Missile Range (where they were first introduced) rather than off-range populations that have established as the on-range population has grown. On-range oryx hunts are offered as a once-in-a-lifetime (OIL) opportunity. Off-range hunts are not OIL.
BARBARY SHEEP (outside of NM more commonly called Aoudad) The Dept. is trying to discourage the expansion of populations outside of the southeastern region. Barbary Sheep are proven to carry and transmit diseases to bighorn sheep. The Dept. does not want Barbary populations to establish in any Bighorn areas. Proposed changes to the rule are as follows:
INITIATION OF THE PRONGHORN RULE The Dept. opened the Pronghorn rule and provided an initial presentation. Pronghorn population growth is driven by both adult female and fawn survival and is typically not greatly affected by male harvest. Population trajectories are driven by adult female and fawn survival; both adult female and fawn survival rates need to be adequate for stable populations. Weather, disease, predation and human induced mortality can all impact adult female and fawn survival; however, availability of forage and concealment cover can lessen or intensify the effect of these individual factors. Which is what the Dept. feels is happening with the Pronghorn population in the northeast. As such the Dept. is preliminarily proposing the following changes to the rule. The rule is now open for public comment. Email your comments to [email protected]
ODDS AND ENDS Remember that the Bighorn, Deer, and Elk Rules are also currently open for public comment. Go to Proposals Under Consideration - NMDGF on the Dept. website to view the updated proposed changes to these rules. MARCH 2026 NM WILDLIFE COMMISSION RECAP The NM Wildlife Commission held a meeting in Albuquerque on Friday, March 20th. The majority of the meeting was focused on the “subsequent discussions” for next 4 years of the Javelina, Turkey, Migratory Bird, and Exotics Rules. Subsequent Discussions are the last opportunity for public input and Commission directive (to the Dept.) prior to the Final Hearing when the Commission approves the amendments to the Rule. The Final Hearing is almost always just a formality. This is because, by law, the Rule must be on the NM register (Sunshine Portal) for 30-days unchanged prior to approval. Thus, if the Commission decides to change anything during the Final Hearing, the Rule must go back out for public comment. Therefore, the Commission never makes changes during the “Final Hearing”. All that to say that changes explained below are highly likely to be what the Commission approves for the next 4-year cycle of the following Rules. Public comment is still open for the following Rules but not for much longer. So, if you feel strongly about something, you MUST reach out to the Commission now. Send your comments to the individual Rule email address. And include the below Commissioner addresses in your comment. [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] FYI - The Commission did not discuss EPLUS during the meeting, nor did they vote to open the rule. THANK YOU to everyone who sent pro-eplus emails to the Commission. No news is very good news!! SUBSEQUENT DISCUSSION OF THE JAVELINA RULE The Dept. is seeing Javelina populations expand across the state. Biologists have finalized population data and are proposing the following changes to the rule.
SUBSEQUENT DISCUSSION OF THE TURKEY RULE Dept. data shows that turkey populations statewide are steady. Season dates continue to be consistent with breeding objectives and success rates from hunters have remained steady over the past decade. The Dept. is proposing the following changes to the rule.
SUBSEQUENT DISCUSSION OF THE MIGRATORY RULE The Migratory Bird Rule is updated annually, and season selections and bag limits are determined in conjunction with the US Fish and Wildlife Service working through the Central and Pacific Flyway Councils. Proposed changes are as follows:
SUBSEQUENT DISCUSSION OF THE EXOTICS RULE The Department regulatory framework for Barbary Sheep, Oryx, and Ibex is called the Exotics Rule. Because these game species are non-native to New Mexico they are managed under different strategies. The rule is now open for public comment. If you would like to voice your opinion on this rule, please email [email protected] IBEX Ibex populations are restricted to the Florida Mountains through an agreement with the BLM. In 2013 the Dept. was under pressure from BLM to significantly reduce the Ibex population. Admittedly the Dept culled too deeply, and population numbers have continued to decline since then for reasons unclear to the Dept. Current Ibex number are extremely low and trophy quality of Billies is terrible. Although the Dept. does not believe that hunter harvest is a factor in the current decline, they feel a large reduction in licenses is warranted. NMCOG wholeheartedly agrees and has encouraged the Dept. to reduce license numbers to as few as humanly possible until the population stabilizes. The Dept. conducted a thermal imaging study on the population in March which resulted in a count of 101 Ibex present on the mountain. Yes, this number is very low but it’s important to remember that the population began in 1964 with a total of 3 female and 1 male Ibex. Thus, not all hope is lost! Hunting licenses has been reduced to minimal levels for 2026 and proposed changes for the next 4-year rule cycle are as follows:
Oryx management is focused on populations located on White Sands Missile Range (where they were first introduced) rather than off-range populations that have established as the on-range population has grown. On-range oryx hunts are offered as a once-in-a-lifetime (OIL) opportunity. Off-range hunts are not OIL.
The Dept. is trying to discourage the expansion of populations outside of the southeastern region. Barbary Sheep are proven to carry and transmit diseases to bighorn sheep. The Dept. does not want Barbary populations to establish in any Bighorn areas. Proposed changes to the rule are as follows:
INITIATION OF THE PRONGHORN RULE The Dept. also opened the Pronghorn rule and provided their initial presentation. Pronghorn population growth is driven by both adult female and fawn survival and is typically not greatly affected by male harvest. Population trajectories are driven by adult female and fawn survival; both adult female and fawn survival rates need to be adequate for stable populations. Weather, disease, predation and human induced mortality can all impact adult female and fawn survival; however, availability of forage can lessen or intensify the effect of these individual factors. The Dept. feels drought is the primary cause of mortality of the Pronghorn population in the northeast. The Dept. is preliminarily proposing to decrease licenses in the northeast as well as the following additional changes to the rule. The rule is now open for public comment. Email your comments to [email protected]
Remember that the Bighorn, Deer, and Elk Rules are also currently open for public comment. Go to Proposals Under Consideration - NMDGF on the Dept. website to view the updated proposed changes to these rules.
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FEB. 2026 RECAP2/25/2026 The NM Wildlife Commission hosted their second meeting of 2026 in Roswell on February 20th. The focus of the meeting was to open Bighorn Sheep, Deer, and Elk Rules. We would encourage everyone to watch the bighorn, deer, and elk presentations. You can watch the meeting at State Game Commission Meeting — Feb. 20, 2026. The bighorn sheep presentation begins at minute 7.54, deer begins at minute 35.17, and elk begins at 1:41.42. As a reminder, 2026 is the year that the Commission will be revising all their big game rules for the next 4yr rule cycle. In January the Commission opened the Javelina, Turkey, Migratory Bird, and Exotics Rule. These rules are currently open for public comment. You can find information on the proposed changes to the rules that have already opened at Proposals Under Consideration - NMDGF. Quick FYI - The New Mexico Dept. of Game and Fish has now officially changed their name to the New Mexico Department of Wildlife. Moving forward NMCOG will be referring to the Deptartment as the NMDW or the Dept. of Wildlife (as opposed to NMDGF or Game & Fish). Likewise, the NM Game Commission is now called the NM Wildlife Commission. Therefore, NMCOG will refer to the “Wildlife Commission” as opposed to the Game Commission. INITIATION OF THE BIGHORN SHEEP RULE The Department provided their initial presentation regarding the bighorn sheep rule. Proposed changes to the rule are as follows:
This rule is now open for public comment. Please send your comments to [email protected] INITIATION OF THE DEER RULE The Department provided their initial presentation regarding the deer rule. Proposed changes to the rule are as follows:
This rule is now open to public comment. Please send your comments to [email protected] INITIATION OF THE ELK RULE The Department provided their initial presentation regarding the elk rule. Proposed changes to the rule are as follows:
This rule is now open for public comment. Please send your comments to [email protected] GENERAL PROPOSED CHANGES TO APPLY TO ALL BIG GAME RULE The Dept. is requesting the following changes for all big game rules
GENERAL PUBLIC COMMENT As happens every 2 years in the legislature and every 4 years at the Commission level, the Wildlife Federation, and everyone’s best frenemy (Brandon Wynn) came out of the woodwork to spew anger and misinformation regarding the EPLUS program. Their tiresome arguments are hollow and have not changed in years. None the less, NMCOG will spend the next several months educating the Commission as to the mutual benefits of the program to landowners, nonresident & resident hunters, outfitters, and (most importantly) wildlife! NMCOG will be enacting a call-to-action request from our members to make your voice heard on this issue. We are still determining the strategic timing of the call-to-action. Stay tuned… Next Commission Meeting
March 20th in ABQ, NM COMMISSIONER CONTACT INFORMATION (You're encouraged to contact the Commissioners any time to voice your opinion) Richard Stump - Chairman Appointed at-large [email protected] Fernando Clemente Jr. - Vice Chairman Appointed at-large [email protected] Gregg Fulfer District 1: Curry, De Baca, Roosevelt, Chaves, Lincoln, Otero, Eddy and Lea counties [email protected] OPEN District 2: Catron, Socorro, Grant, Hidalgo, Luna, Sierra and Dona Ana counties Tirzio Lopez District 3: San Juan, McKinley, Cibola, Valencia, Sandoval, Los Alamos and Rio Arriba counties [email protected] Kyle Harwood District 4: Santa Fe, Taos, Colfax, Union, Mora, Harding, Quay, San Miguel, Guadalupe and Torrance counties [email protected] Dr. Christopher Witt District 5: Bernalillo County [email protected]
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JAN. 2026 COMMISSION RECAP1/12/2026 The New Mexico State game commission hosted their first meeting of 2026 in Santa Fe on Friday January 9th. The Commission opened by announcing the resignation of former vice-chairwoman Commissioner Sharon Salazar-Hickey. Her resignation creates a second vacancy on the Commission and puts the number of active Commissioners at 5 (just one Commissioner over the quorum requirement). Will Governor Michele Lujan Grisham appoint 2 new commissioners prior to terming out of office at the end of 2026? My crystal ball says it’s not likely, but you never know. First order of business at every January meeting is to elect a new Chair and Vice-chair. Commissioner Richard Stump was reelected to hold the Chairman position and Commissioner Fernando Clemente took over the Vice-chairman position. The Commission also voted on the dates and locations of subsequent meetings throughout the year. Those dates and locations are as follows:
Avid readers may notice that the number of meetings is substantially higher than normal. That is because 2026 is the year that the Commission will be revising each of the Big Game Rules for the next 4-yr cycle (except for Bear and Cougar, which will be revised next year). 2026 is going to be a busy year for everyone involved in the NM hunting industry, so let’s get started! As a refresher, each big game rule will be revised over 3 commission meetings. The “initiation” opens the rule so the Dept. can begin taking public comment. At the “subsequent” meeting the Dept. will present the results of public comment and finalize their recommendations to the commission (the Dept. will also host additional public meetings between the initiation and subsequent phase of the process). The “final” hearing is when the rule becomes finalized for the next 4 years. No changes can be made during the “final” rule hearing. Rules are opened in a staggered order. Javelina, Turkey, Migratory Bird, Barbary Sheep, Oryx, and Ibex opened during the January meeting. Deer, Elk, and Bighorn Sheep will open in February. And Pronghorn will open in March. All rules will be finalized by the November meeting. INITIATION OF THE JAVELINA RULE The Dept. is seeing Javelina populations expand across the state. Biologists are still finalizing population data but are preliminarily proposing to increase the OTC license caps as well as allow the bootheel hunters (GMUs 19, 23, 24, 25, 26, & 27) to hunt the OTC areas. The rule is now open for public comment. If you would like to voice your opinion on this rule, please email [email protected] INITIATION OF THE TURKEY RULE Dept. data showed that turkey populations statewide are steady. Season dates continue to be consistent with breeding objectives and success rates from hunters have remained steady over the past decade. The Dept. is still in the process of determining whether they believe hens should continue to be harvested in the fall. They will report back to the Commission with that recommendation at the subsequent rule hearing. The Dept. is beginning a new study with using GPS “backpacks” to mark hens. This will make gathering biological data on turkey both easier and more efficient. Preliminarily the Dept. is proposing to increase Goulds Turkey permits. The Dept. reports that Goulds Turkey are doing exceptionally well (they were delisted from the state threatened and endangered species list in 2022). The population is expanding into Arizona as well as into Mexico. The Turkey Rule is now open for public comment. If you would like to voice your opinion on this rule, please email [email protected] INITIATION OF THE MIGRATORY RULE The Dept. provided their initial presentation of proposed changes to the Migratory Bird Rule. The Migratory Bird Rule is updated annually, and season selections and bag limits are determined in conjunction with the US Fish and Wildlife Service working through the Central and Pacific Flyway Councils. The Dept. is still waiting to receive this year’s federal framework. Once the framework is received there is not likely to be many changes to the rule. The rule is now open for public comment. If you would like to voice your opinion on this rule, please email [email protected] INITIATION OF THE EXOTICS RULE The Department regulatory framework for Barbary Sheep, Oryx, and Ibex is called the Exotics Rule. Because these game species are non-native to New Mexico they are managed under different strategies. The rule is now open for public comment. If you would like to voice your opinion on this rule, please email [email protected] IBEX Ibex populations are restricted to the Florida Mountains through an agreement with the BLM. In 2013 the Dept. was under pressure from BLM to significantly reduce the Ibex population. Admittedly the Dept culled too deeply, and population numbers have continued to decline since then for reasons unclear to the Dept. Current Ibex numbers are extremely low and trophy quality of Billies is terrible. Although the Dept. does not believe that hunter harvest is a factor in the current decline, they feel a large reduction in licenses is warranted. NMCOG wholeheartedly agrees and has encouraged the Dept. to reduce license numbers to as few as humanly possible until the population stabilizes. The Dept. plans to conduct a thermal imaging study on the population in March and will present those results to the Commission at the subsequent hearing. ORYX Oryx management is focused on populations located on White Sands Missile Range (where they were first introduced) rather than off-range populations that have established as the on-range population has grown. On-range oryx hunts are offered as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. The Dept. is considering increasing off-range licenses and they are proposing to require private landowners to register their property and obtain an authorization code for private land oryx licenses. The Dept. believes this will help cut down on people using private land licenses to harvest off-range Oryx on public land. NMCOG also agrees strongly with this idea and is pushing to establish ranch authorizations codes for all private land licenses (just like is already done for OTC elk licenses in the secondary units). BARBARY SHEEP (more commonly called Aoudad outside of NM) Barbary Sheep populations seem to thrive in NM and are allowed to flourish in the southeast. The Dept. is trying to discourage the expansion of populations outside of the southeastern region. Barbary Sheep are proven to carry and transmit diseases to bighorn sheep. The Dept. does not want Barbary populations to establish in any Bighorn areas. The Dept. has not determined whether they will increase license numbers for Barbary Sheep. They are interested to hear from hunters. FINAL APPROVAL OF THE SHED HUNTING RULE The Commission also finally voted to approve the new shed hunting rule. As part of Senate Bill 5 (which was passed by the NM Legislature in January) the Dept. is obligated (starting in 2026) to charge a non-resident license fee of $200 for “shed hunting”. The legislation also specified that “a shed hunter license shall not be required for shed hunting by a NM resident.” These two additions to the Game and Fish statute required that the Game Commission promulgate a Rule to define “shed hunting.” The new rule, which was approved, is within the Manner & Method Rule 19.31.10 NMAC. It does not apply to resident shed hunters. Non-residents who collect more than 2 sheds will now be required to purchase a $200 license prior to collecting shed antlers. The rule did not establish a season. Any non-resident who is caught in possession of more than 2 sheds without a shed hunting license will be issued a citation and the antlers will be confiscated. Commissioner Lopez voted against the motion insinuating that he felt the rule should apply to both residents and non-residents. ODDS AND ENDS During the meeting the Commission also adopted the annual resolution to the Open Meetings Act (as they are required to do by statute). The Dept. is also proposing to require that licenses be purchased at least a day prior to the hunt starting. They have seen a recent uptick in the number of people who purchase a license and then immediately use their eTag carcass tag. This indicates that some hunters may be hunting without a license and then purchasing a license if right before (or worse - after) they harvest game. They believe a requirement to purchase the license the day before the hunt will help curb this. NMCOG is in favor of this change. Next Commission Meeting
February 20th in Roswell, NM COMMISSIONER CONTACT INFORMATION (You're encouraged to contact the Commissioners any time to voice your opinion) Richard Stump - Chairman Appointed at-large [email protected] Fernando Clemente Jr. - Vice Chairman Appointed at-large [email protected] Gregg Fulfer District 1: Curry, De Baca, Roosevelt, Chaves, Lincoln, Otero, Eddy and Lea counties [email protected] OPEN District 2: Catron, Socorro, Grant, Hidalgo, Luna, Sierra and Dona Ana counties Tirzio Lopez District 3: San Juan, McKinley, Cibola, Valencia, Sandoval, Los Alamos and Rio Arriba counties [email protected] OPEN District 4: Santa Fe, Taos, Colfax, Union, Mora, Harding, Quay, San Miguel, Guadalupe and Torrance counties Dr. Christopher Witt District 5: Bernalillo County [email protected]
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November Re-cap11/13/2025 The New Mexico State game commission hosted a meeting in Los Alamos on Friday, November 7. The meeting was rather short, and the agenda was so routine that we considered not publishing a recap at. However, the Fisheries Rule and the Upland Game Rule were both finalized and the intra-commission drama seemed interesting enough to warrant a summary. FINAL APPROVAL OF THE FISHERIES RULE The department provided their final presentation regarding the next 4-year cycle of the Fisheries Rule. NMCOG is extremely frustrated and saddened to report that none of our proposed changes to the San Juan River fishery were accepted in the final rule. Outfitters on the San Juan will no doubt read this and correctly say “I told you so”. And it’s true, the changes proposed by NMCOG (which we thought made perfectly logical sense and would be so easily accepted by the department) were shot down in the end. With the worst part being the way the Department led NMCOG to believe our proposal would be incorporated into the final. Surprise, it wasn’t. Which is a setback but not the end of the fight. We will continue to encourage the Dept. to make management changes on the San Juan River (which do not require Commission approval). And we will continue working with NM State Parks. The silver lining in this story is that NMCOG learned a very valuable lesson. Trust will no longer be afforded to the Department as it relates to any Rule development going forward. The commission voted unanimously to approve the following amendments to the rule:
The Dept. provided their final presentation regarding possible changes to the next 4-year cycle of the Upland Game Rule. The Commission approved the Rule unanimously.
ODDS, ENDS, AND ENDLESS DRAMA
The Commission also approved the annual depredation report, the annual equipment disposal list, and the addition of a 25% discount on license purchases to NM residents who qualify for SNAP benefits (this was a requirement of Senate Bill 5, which passed in January). However, a vote to increase the vendor fee (also a requirement of SB5) from $1 to $2 was sidelined by Commissioner Lopez who voted against the increase claiming it was his “line in the sand”. Head shaking moments such as this continue to plague the Commission and really have for the entirety of Governor MLG’s term. While nobody got canned before Friday meeting, the Commission continues to be more theatrical than informative. Commissioner Fulfer was, as usual, nowhere to be found. Commissioner Lopez, in addition to his anti-vendor fee rant, railed against outfitters during the discussion of the Fisheries Rule, ridiculously sympathizing with people illegally fishing from the boat ramps because “we all know how much it cost to fish the San Juan”. Commissioner Lopez has become progressively more hateful towards non-resident hunters/anglers or basically anyone with the wealth to hire outfitters. Commissioner Salazar Hickey gave a 15-minute dissertation on her hatred for poachers (specifically nonresident poachers). While we agreed with the sentiment, the rant seemed a bit like preaching to the choir and totally came from left field. After all, the department reviews bad hunter behavior and revocations at literally every meeting. In general, it continues to be unclear which commissioners are allies, and which aren’t. Honestly, they really all seem to dislike each other equally.
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August 20258/19/2025 Game Commission Recap |
