Bill
HB 259
Supplemental K-12 school facilities appropriations-2.
HB 259 would revoke a hunter's license for one year after dumping dead wildlife, directly affecting licensed hunters and deterring improper carcass disposal (died in committee).
Bill
HB 259
HB 259 would revoke a hunter's license for one year after dumping dead wildlife, directly affecting licensed hunters and deterring improper carcass disposal (died in committee).
Status: Died in committee
Introduced: August 19, 2025
Subject area: Wildlife, Fisheries & Parks
HB 259 would have made unauthorized disposal (dumping) of dead wildlife a sanctionable violation by tying a hunting-license penalty to the act. The core intent was to discourage improper disposal of wildlife carcasses by imposing administrative consequences on people who dump dead wild animals.
Note: The bill text provided to the summary request was limited. No specific language about definitions (e.g., what constitutes “dumping” or “dead wildlife”), required scienter (intent), enforcement procedures, or any related criminal penalties, civil fines, or restitution was included in the materials available. The bill’s scope (statewide vs. county-limited), exceptions (e.g., roadkill reporting, licensed disposal, disease control by agencies), and appeals/process for license reinstatement were not available.
Because the available record is sparse, readers should consult the bill text or committee files for:
- Exact statutory language and definitions (what conduct is prohibited; mens rea; exemptions).
- Enforcement mechanism and burden of proof (criminal conviction vs. administrative finding).
- Any additional penalties (fines, restitution) or civil remedies.
- Agency rulemaking or administrative procedures for revocation and reinstatement.
If you want, I can draft a concise checklist of amendments or model language that would clarify enforcement, exemptions (e.g., authorized roadkill salvage or public-health removals), and due‑process safeguards for license revocation.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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