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In Brief

Idaho’s rules that govern the use of technology in hunting were spiked and then reinvented with only minor tweaks by the state’s Legislature.

Rules that ended up being signed into law curtail specific uses of technology in hunting

Idaho’s rules that govern the use of technology in hunting were spiked and then reinvented with only minor tweaks by the state’s Legislature.

The rules forbid the use of drones, thermal imaging, night vision optics and transmitting trail cameras from Aug. 30 to Dec. 31.

Crafted by the Hunting and Advanced Technology Working Group and adopted by the Idaho Fish and Game Commission they only applied to hunting, including scouting and game retrieval. The legislative review is required of all new administrative rules adopted by state agencies.

During that review, some constituents and legislators expressed concern that the rules might reduce the harvest of predators like wolves and mountain lions, or affect nonhunting applications of those technologies.

So legislators killed the administrative rules and then wrote nearly identical legislation that passed both chambers and was signed into law by Idaho Gov. Brad Little earlier this month.

The legislation differs from the rules in a few areas. Wolf and mountain lion hunting are exempted from the technology restrictions. The ban on technology for game retrieval and monitoring traps was eliminated. The rules were extended to cover not only big game hunting but also bird hunting. And the law states the restrictions do not apply to monitoring livestock or property.

“This legislation essentially kept the spirit of the rule but expresses more explicitly the main concerns the legislators were hearing from the public on the rule,” said Ellary Tucker Williams, legislative and community engagement coordinator for the Idaho Department of Fish and Game at Boise.

The Idaho Department of Fish and Game and its governing commission assembled the Hunting and Advanced Technology Working Group in 2024 to craft a set of recommendations designed to ensure the constant march of technology does not swamp fair chase standards nor lead to overharvest of game animals.

Barker may be contacted at ebarker@lmtribune.com. Subscribe to his outdoors newsletter “The Fish Wrap” at lmtribune.com/newsletters.

The Idaho Legislature also approved a resolution supporting highway wildlife crossing structures and passed a law making hunting the official sport of Idaho.

Legislators did not approve a pair of proposed constitutional amendments that would have changed the way state land is managed. One would have forbidden the sale of any land transferred from the federal government. The other would have removed maximum sustained revenue as the overriding management objective of state land.

As previously reported by the Tribune, lawmakers passed legislation giving the governor the power to hire and fire the directors of the Idaho Department of Fish and Game and Idaho Parks and Recreation Department.

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