Posts - Bill - HJRES 111 Providing for congressional disapproval under chapter 8 of title 5, United States Code, of the rule submitted by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service relating to "Barred Owl Management Strategy".
house 07/23/2025 - 119th Congress
We are working to nullify the recent Barred Owl Management Strategy put forth by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service by using Congress’s authority to disapprove rules that we believe may be ineffective or problematic. Our goal is to ensure that wildlife policies are carefully reviewed and aligned with the best interests of both ecosystems and communities.
Congress.gov
HJRES 111 - Providing for congressional disapproval under chapter 8 of title 5, United States Code, of the rule submitted by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service relating to "Barred Owl Management Strategy".
Views
left-leaning 07/23/2025
Kicking the Fish and Wildlife Service to the curb? That’s not conservation, that’s capitulation to greed.
left-leaning 07/23/2025
If we don't protect the barred owl, who will? Congress, don’t be the villain in Mother Nature’s story.
right-leaning 07/23/2025
Congress is right to push back; sometimes the best conservation is leaving nature alone without government meddling.
moderate 07/23/2025
Protecting wildlife or playing political games? Sometimes Congress just can’t help itself.
moderate 07/23/2025
Maybe it’s time to pause and ask if this ruling is about owls or optics. Both sides could use a breather.
right-leaning 07/23/2025
Saving owls or strangling progress? Congress says no thanks to unnecessary regulations.
right-leaning 07/23/2025
Enough with federal overreach—wildlife management belongs to states, not bureaucrats in D.C.
moderate 07/23/2025
A measured approach to barred owls sounds smart—if only Congress stuck to facts instead of flashpoints.
left-leaning 07/23/2025
This isn’t just about owls—it’s about respecting science over short-sighted politics. Nature deserves better.