Oregon Initiative to Criminalize Hunting and Fishing Progresses

An Oregon initiative to criminalize hunting & fishing has just moved a step closer to November's ballot. 
Initiative Petition 28, also called the PEACE Act, has reportedly submitted enough signatures to meet Oregon’s minimum threshold for the November 2026 ballot. It is not officially on the ballot yet & the signatures still have to be verified. But the fact that it has gotten this far should get every hunter, fisherman, farmer, rancher, trapper, and conservation-minded voter’s attention.
This is not some minor animal welfare proposal.
According to the official Oregon ballot title, IP28 would criminalize “injuring/killing animals, including for food, hunting, fishing” and would also criminalize certain breeding practices. The campaign behind it is not hiding the ball either. Their own website says the measure would extend legal protections to animals on farms, in research labs, and in the wild, protecting them from slaughter, hunting, fishing, and experimentation.
In plain English, this would effectively end lawful hunting and fishing in Oregon as people know it - and this matters far beyond Oregon.
Hunting and fishing are not animal cruelty. They are tradition. They are wildlife management. They are a means to source food. They are how millions of Americans stay connected to the land, the water, and the responsibility that comes with taking life seriously. They also fund conservation in a way that the loudest anti-hunting voices rarely want to acknowledge.
Licenses, tags, excise taxes, habitat work, access programs, fisheries management, enforcement, research, restoration - a massive portion of real conservation work is paid for by the very people this measure would treat like criminals.
And the impact would not stop with hunters and fishermen. This proposal also reaches into farming, ranching, trapping, pest control, animal breeding, and even research. Supporters can dress that up in soft language about compassion, but the practical result is extreme: criminalizing normal, lawful, regulated activities that feed families, support rural economies, and keep wildlife populations managed.
There is a difference between preventing cruelty and trying to erase the human role in the natural world. Hunters and fishermen understand something that ballot activists often do not: nature is not a Disney movie. Animals die. Ecosystems have to be managed. Food comes from somewhere. Predators, prey, fish, livestock, habitat, disease, carrying capacity, and human communities all have to be dealt with in the real world, not in slogans.
Oregon voters may soon be asked to decide whether hunting, fishing, and animal agriculture should be treated as crimes.
So what can people do?
If you live in Oregon, watch this closely. Follow the Secretary of State’s verification process. Contact your state representatives. Talk to your county commissioners. Support groups that are fighting this measure. Make sure your hunting, fishing, farming, and ranching communities understand what is actually in the petition before the campaign slogans take over.
If this makes the ballot, vote!
If you do not live in Oregon, do not ignore it. Share this with people who do. Support the organizations pushing back. Pay attention to similar efforts in your own state. These movements test the language in one place, refine it, and then try to export it somewhere else.
Hunters and fishermen cannot afford to stay quiet while other people redefine conservation, food, and wildlife management for us, because these fights never stay in one state for long.
Back to blog

Leave a comment

Please note, comments need to be approved before they are published.

  • Drinkware

    Let's keep disposables out of the ocean, the woods, and the mountains....

  • Don't Suck

    Don't Suck

    Be safe. Take care of your gear. Train. Stay vigilant. Close the...

  • Topo

    Topo

    Our Topo Collection is inspired by the effort and discovery involved in...

Popular Collection: Hats

Cover your head on the water, in the tree stand, or at the tiki bar - and when you're asked where you got your headgear make them buy you a drink first. ;)