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Outdoor briefs

Outdoor briefs
helenair.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from helenair.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Montana Rivers Becoming Too Low and Too Hot for Fish

Montana Rivers Becoming Too Low and Too Hot for Fish
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Additional fishing restrictions on several Montana rivers in place

HELENA, Mont. - Several angling restrictions on rivers in southwest, north-central and south-central Montana go into effect Tuesday due to warming temperatures and low flows. The restrictions include what are commonly known as “hoot owl” restrictions, meaning fishing is closed from 2 p.m. to midnight each day. Some waters are under full fishing closures, which prohibit fishing at all times of day. These closures and restrictions will stay in effect until conditions improve, according to a release from Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks. The following closures are in effect: • A full fishing closure for portions of the Shields River from the confluence with Yellowstone River to USFS Crandal Creek Bridge.

High temps prompt additional fishing restrictions on several Montana rivers

High temps prompt additional fishing restrictions on several Montana rivers
havredailynews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from havredailynews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Trump environmental legacy stumbles in court

ROB CHANEY When a federal court ruled the federal Bureau of Land Management skipped crucial steps in approving resource management plans for Montana last year, it reflected a trend tainting much of the environmental rule-making under the Trump administration. “They’re having a remarkably low level of success,” Georgetown Law School environmental law professor Bill Buzbee said of the past four years’ regulatory court progress. “Their loss record is 70 to 90 percent under Trump. Those agencies usually win 70 percent of the time.” He attributed the reversal to a consistent failure by policy makers to check all the boxes necessary to avoid appearing arbitrary and capricious — the standard federal rules get judged under the Administrative Procedures Act. To endure, a federal rule must show it had well-documented reasons for a change and went through a complete public review process.

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