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Bill

Bill

LC 3877

Generally revise hunting laws

2025 Regular Session

LC 3877 would broadly revise hunting laws, but the draft died in process; no specifics available, affecting hunters, wildlife agencies, and enforcement.

(LC) Draft Died in Process
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Bill Summary · LC 3877

Summary: LC 3877 — Generally revise hunting laws

This summary covers the metadata and status of LC 3877, titled “Generally revise hunting laws,” with note on the lack of available bill text. The available information does not include the bill’s specific provisions.

Overview

  • Bill number: LC 3877
  • Title: Generally revise hunting laws
  • Subject: Fish and Wildlife
  • Introduced: December 15, 2024
  • Status: Draft Died in Process (LC)
  • Classification: bill
  • Legislative actions:
    • 2024-12-15: Drafter Assigned
    • 2024-12-15: Draft On Hold
    • 2025-05-23: Draft Died in Process

What the bill would do (content not provided)

  • The bill’s title indicates an aim to broadly revise hunting laws. However, the actual text with specific provisions, changes, and any targeted sections is not included in the information provided here.
  • Because the substantive provisions are not available, we cannot enumerate precise changes to seasons, bag limits, licensing, enforcement, penalties, storage, habitat provisions, or other regulatory details.

Status, timeline, and procedural context

  • Introduced on 2024-12-15.
  • On the same day, the drafter was assigned and the draft was placed on hold.
  • On 2025-05-23, the bill is recorded as Draft Died in Process, meaning the draft did not advance in the legislative process for the session in which this status was recorded.
  • “Died in Process” generally indicates the bill did not move out of its sponsor’s office or out of committee/working draft stage, and is unlikely to become law in the current session absent reintroduction.

Who would be affected (if enacted)

  • Hunters and hunting-related stakeholders (e.g., hunting guides, outfitters, sporting goods vendors) who operate under hunting regulations.
  • State or local wildlife-management agencies responsible for implementing hunting laws.
  • Law enforcement officers tasked with enforcing hunting regulations.
  • The broader public that benefits from wildlife management and conservation programs.

Next steps and where to find more information

  • To understand exact provisions and potential impact, obtain the bill text and any fiscal notes or committee reports from the relevant legislative website or bill repository.
  • Monitor for any reinstatement, reintroduction, or amendments in subsequent sessions or iterations.
  • If you have a stake in hunting policy, consider reaching out to the bill’s sponsor or the drafter for clarifications or updates.

If you’d like, I can format this once you share the bill text or any committee reports, and extract the specific provisions, timelines, and fiscal impacts.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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