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Spring 2017

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TEXAS WILDLIFE ASSOCIATION<br />

BY DAVID YEATES, CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER<br />

Texas Wildlife Association (TWA) had another busy year in<br />

2016. We added some new staff members, along with their<br />

energy and fresh ideas, to the TWA team.<br />

Staff and volunteer efforts to drive recruitment and retention<br />

by focusing on value, outreach, and incentives pushed our<br />

membership to about 10,000. It’s invigorating to see TWA’s<br />

message resonate with our fellow Texans.<br />

Our education programs reached 661,000 Texans achieving<br />

a new high watermark this year. Our Texas Big Game Award<br />

banquets had more attendees and entries than ever before.<br />

Our Texas Youth Hunting Program hosted nearly 200 hunts<br />

which put about 1,200 young Texans in the field. Let there<br />

be no doubt, these programs make a difference for Texas:<br />

eyes are opened, lessons are learned, hunters are made, and<br />

conservationists are born.<br />

At this writing, the Texas Legislature has just convened its 85th<br />

Session. TWA is fully engaged on behalf of our members. We<br />

are keeping a vigilant eye on all land, water and wildlife issues.<br />

During this session we hope to advance meaningful reforms to<br />

eminent domain statutes, establishing more equitable treatment<br />

for rural landowners. We are fortunate to not only have strong<br />

partners but the “high ground” on the argument. We will<br />

continue working to maintain responsible disease management<br />

in our wildlife resources, which includes sufficient funding<br />

for the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department and the Texas<br />

Animal Health Commission. We will also be standing for the<br />

established ownership of groundwater as private property.<br />

The makeup of the Texas Legislature reflects our state’s<br />

massive rural/urban imbalance, creating headwinds for our<br />

policy priorities. It’s only through active engagement and<br />

organized efforts with like-minded organizations that we can<br />

hold the line for our great state’s remaining wild, open spaces.<br />

Just as TWA needs partners for our policy efforts, we need<br />

partners for our Texas Youth Hunting Program. Please take a<br />

moment to reflect on this past hunting season and consider<br />

whether you had time to host a hunt on your property or to<br />

volunteer to help with a hunt.<br />

As I mentioned, TYHP hosts about 200 hunts a year with just<br />

five staff members. Oftentimes, there will be 20 or more hunts<br />

running simultaneously on any given weekend. How do we do it?<br />

With the generous support of volunteers and willing landowners.<br />

These hunts get young Texans, who have little or no other<br />

opportunity to hunt, out in the field. They are accompanied by<br />

their parent or guardian and are under the tutelage of trained<br />

volunteers. We incorporate educational activities and the<br />

“gospel” of land stewardship into each hunt.<br />

This program has a huge impact. For many of these kids, this is<br />

not only the first time they will experience Texas’s rich wildlife<br />

resources, but it is the first time they’ve ever seen stars in<br />

the night sky or heard the birds awaken at sun rise. If you’re<br />

interested in helping, please contact us at the TWA office at<br />

(800) 839-9453. In our experience, the landowners who are<br />

hosting hunts get as much—or more—out the weekend as the<br />

young hunters.<br />

Each summer we host the TWA Annual Convention at the J.W.<br />

Marriott Hill Country Resort and Spa in San Antonio. This year it<br />

will be held July 13–15. Mark your calendars now. Visit<br />

www.Texas-Wildlife.org to register.<br />

The educational programs are second to none; the trade show<br />

is one of the best in the state; the speakers are engaging;<br />

the fellowship is welcoming; the food is great; the drinks are<br />

cold, and the accommodations are first-class. As part of the<br />

weekend, we host the statewide Texas Big Game Awards,<br />

a Private Lands Summit and a Grand Auction with items<br />

of exceptional quality, including hunts that are unavailable<br />

elsewhere. This convention helps fund our programs, but more<br />

importantly it gives our members—new and old—a chance to<br />

get together to celebrate the wildlife of Texas.<br />

As a fellow enthusiast for Texas’s open spaces, thanks for all<br />

that you do to care for them.<br />

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