HF4246 (Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026))
Core Moose Range designated, Moose Co-Stewardship Committee and moose restoration and research account established, report required, rulemaking authority provided, money transferred, and money appropriated.
Related bill: SF4441
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
- Designate and protect a Core Moose Range within Minnesota to prioritize moose management, restoration, and ecosystem health.
- Create a Moose CoStewardship Committee to guide planning, monitoring, and decisions about moose in the Core Moose Range, using both scientific data and Indigenous knowledge.
- Establish a Moose Restoration and Research Account funded by license revenue to support moose research, habitat restoration, monitoring, and committee activities.
- Provide rulemaking authority and annual reporting to oversee moose management and funding changes.
Main Provisions
Moose season and license rules (amending 97B.505):
- The commissioner may set a bull-only moose season and determine open areas and conditions for taking moose.
- Harvest quotas can be approved only after:
- population size, survival, and recruitment thresholds are met;
- habitat indices indicate sustained capacity; and
- the Moose CoStewardship Committee approves the harvest quota.
- Harvest quotas must be reviewed annually by Tribal biologists in coordination with Department of Natural Resources biologists.
- The commissioner may establish processes for awarding moose licenses, including lotteries and auctions.
Core Moose Range and governance (creating 97B.512):
- Subdivision 1 — Core Moose Range designation: The 1854 Ceded Territory is designated as Minnesota’s Core Moose Range, with moose treated as a priority species within this area.
- Subdivision 2 — Moose CoStewardship Committee: The committee must include representatives from the Department of Natural Resources; the 1854 Treaty Authority; the Grand Portage Band, Fond du Lac Band, and Bois Forte Band of Chippewa; federal land management agencies; conservation organizations; and the timber/forestry industry.
- Subdivision 3 — Duties: The committee must develop and maintain a management plan, coordinate habitat restoration and monitoring, review population data and harvest recommendations annually, and ensure decisions reflect the best available science and Indigenous knowledge.
- Subdivision 4 — Moose restoration and research account: A dedicated account is created in the game and fish fund. Revenue from moose licenses, auctions, and lotteries goes into this account and is used for:
- moose research;
- habitat restoration and enhancement;
- moose monitoring; and
- expenses of the Moose CoStewardship Committee and related activities.
- Subdivision 5 — Annual report: By January 15 each year, the commissioner must report to legislative chairs and ranking minority members on moose population trends, habitat restoration outcomes, economic impacts, and cost-stewardship activities.
Funding transfer (Section 3):
- In fiscal year 2027, a one-time transfer from the general fund will be made to the moose habitat restoration and research account.
Significant Changes to Existing Law
- Adds a formal process for a bull-only moose season tied to specific population, habitat, and committee-approval thresholds.
- Establishes the Core Moose Range in the 1854 Ceded Territory and prioritizes moose within that area.
- Creates the Moose CoStewardship Committee with diverse representation, including tribal authorities and federal agencies, to guide moose management.
- Requires alignment of land, forest, wildlife, and climate policies within the Core Moose Range to support moose restoration and ecosystem health.
- Creates a dedicated Moose Restoration and Research Account funded by license revenue, with explicit expenditures for research, restoration, monitoring, and committee costs.
- Introduces annual reporting to legislators and a one-time fiscal transfer to support initial restoration and research efforts.
Implementation and Oversight
- Rulemaking authority is granted to the commissioner to establish the bull-only season, harvest quotas, and license distribution methods (including lotteries and auctions).
- Annual joint quota reviews by tribal biologists and DNR biologists are required.
- An annual report to legislative leadership is required, detailing population trends, habitat outcomes, economic effects, and cost-share activities.
Potential Impacts
- Conservation benefit: firmer framework for moose restoration and habitat improvement within the Core Moose Range.
- Collaborative governance: formal involvement of tribal authorities, federal agencies, conservation groups, and industry.
- Funding stream: dedicated account funding moose research, habitat work, and monitoring, potentially increasing resources for moose management.
- Regulatory changes: new rules for hunting seasons and license allocation could affect hunting opportunities and revenue use.
Implementation Considerations
- Coordination among multiple jurisdictions and stakeholders (tribal governments, state agencies, federal agencies, conservation groups, and industry).
- Ensuring licensing processes (lotteries/auctions) are fair and transparent.
- Monitoring and adapting population and habitat data to adjust quotas and policies over time.
Relevant Terms
- Core Moose Range
- Moose CoStewardship Committee
- Moose restoration and research account
- 1854 Ceded Territory
- bull-only moose season
- harvest quota
- Tribal biologists
- Department of Natural Resources (DNR)
- 1854 Treaty Authority
- Grand Portage Band of Lake Superior Chippewa
- Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa
- Bois Forte Band of Chippewa
- Pollution Control Agency
- Board of Water and Soil Resources
- Environmental Quality Board
- moose licenses
- lotteries
- auctions
- best available science
- Indigenous knowledge
- moose population trends
- habitat restoration and Monitoring
- costewardship activities
- general fund transfer
- fiscal year 2027 (FY2027)
Bill text versions
- Introduction PDF PDF file
Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 12, 2026 | House | Action | Introduction and first reading, referred to | Environment and Natural Resources Finance and Policy |
Citations
[
{
"analysis": {
"added": [
"A bull-only moose season may be opened by rule when population size, habitat indices indicating sustained capacity, and the Moose CoStewardship Committee's approval of the harvest quota are met."
],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Amends Minnesota Statutes 2024 section 97B.505 to designate a bull-only moose season and set conditions for opening the harvest alongside the Moose CoStewardship framework.",
"modified": [
"Reframes the section to incorporate new trigger conditions for moose season openings and the associated licensing processes under the Moose CoStewardship framework."
]
},
"citation": "97B.505",
"subdivision": "a"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [
"The harvest quota must be jointly reviewed annually by Tribal biologists and Department of Natural Resources biologists."
],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Adds an annual joint quota review requirement for moose harvest.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "97B.505",
"subdivision": "b"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [
"The commissioner may by rule prescribe processes for awarding moose licenses, including lotteries and auctions."
],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Authorizes rulemaking for licensing processes for moose licenses, including lotteries and auctions.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "97B.505",
"subdivision": "c"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [
"The 1854 Ceded Territory is designated as Minnesota's Core Moose Range."
],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Designates the 1854 Ceded Territory as Minnesota's Core Moose Range.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "97B.512",
"subdivision": "Subd.1a"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [
"The commissioner and relevant agencies must align land, forest, wildlife, and climate policies within the Core Moose Range to support moose restoration and ecosystem health."
],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Requires policy alignment within Core Moose Range to support moose restoration and ecosystem health.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "97B.512",
"subdivision": "Subd.1b"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [
"A Moose CoStewardship Committee must be established by the commissioner."
],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Creates the Moose CoStewardship Committee.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "97B.512",
"subdivision": "Subd.2"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [
"The Committee must develop and maintain a management plan for the Core Moose Range.",
"Coordinate moose habitat restoration and monitoring.",
"Review moose population data and harvest recommendations annually.",
"Ensure decisions reflect best available science and Indigenous knowledge."
],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Defines the duties of the Moose CoStewardship Committee.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "97B.512",
"subdivision": "Subd.3"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [
"The moose restoration and research account is created in the game and fish fund.",
"Revenue from moose licenses, license auctions, and license lotteries credited to the account and appropriated to the commissioner for moose research, habitat restoration and enhancement, moose monitoring, and expenses of the Moose CoStewardship Committee and related activities."
],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Creates the moose restoration and research account and outlines funding uses.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "97B.512",
"subdivision": "Subd.4"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [
"By January 15 each year, the commissioner must report to the chairs and ranking minority members of the legislative committees with jurisdiction over environment and natural resources detailing moose population trends, habitat restoration outcomes, economic impacts, and costewardship activities."
],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Requires annual reporting on moose population trends and related activities.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "97B.512",
"subdivision": "Subd.5"
}
]Progress through the legislative process
In Committee