Minnesota DNR evaluates progress on deer plan
Published 5:42 pm Tuesday, January 7, 2025
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Public invited to comment about plan progress, attend webinar
Minnesota’s management of white-tailed deer populations shows numerous accomplishments, and work that remains before some goals and metrics are met, according to a Minnesota Department of Natural Resources midpoint review of the statewide deer plan.
The plan is in effect from 2018-2028. The midpoint review assesses progress toward goals, objectives and strategies put forth in the 10-year plan, and includes 15 performance metrics and associated targets. The midpoint review is available for the public to review, and the DNR scheduled a webinar on Tuesday, Jan. 28, 6-8 p.m. for people to hear more and comment about the midpoint review and the deer plan. The documents and a link to the webinar are available on Minnesota DNR website (mndnr.gov/deerplan).
“This is a good opportunity to assess our progress toward the eight goals in the deer plan, identify what is going well and where more work is needed,” said Barb Keller, big game program leader. “This midpoint is also a great time to decide what work we should focus on over the next phase of the plan implementation.”
Among the achievements identified in the review, the Minnesota DNR revised deer population goals in all deer permit areas through a four-year process, expanded the youth deer season statewide, established a public deer advisory committee, sampled more than 70,000 deer for chronic wasting disease, acquired 28,000 acres of public land dedicated to hunting and managed a total of nearly 370,000 acres of public land to benefit deer habitat.
Metrics not yet met include having deer populations in 75% of deer permit areas within deer population goal range, achieving an annual target of 200,000 deer harvested each season, communicating about the deer hunting regulations significantly earlier in the year, and eliminating core areas of disease in the wild deer population.
The midpoint assessment document also includes a list of emerging considerations since the plan was adopted in 2018. Among them are public concerns about wolf and deer numbers, the growth of the footprint of CWD in the state, technological advances in hunting equipment, plans for a new electronic licensing system, increased hunter selectivity in what deer they harvest and the long-term decline in deer hunter participation.
“As we consider what’s accomplished so far, we are hoping people will review our recommendations for the next phase of the plan and share their thoughts on how they think the midpoint assessment has characterized deer management since 2018,” Keller said. “Importantly, the plan also contains a look at what’s changed in deer management since the plan was adopted, and we will need public awareness and participation on those issues as well.”
To learn more about the midpoint assessment and send comments online, visit the Minnesota DNR website (mndnr.gov/deerplan). Public comments may be submitted online, emailed to Big.Game.Program.DNR@state.mn.us or sent by mail to Minnesota DNR/Barb Keller, 500 Lafayette Road, St. Paul, MN, 55155.
The statewide deer plan released in 2018 set goals and priorities, increased formal opportunities for citizens to influence deer decisions, and aims for a deer population without core areas of disease. The plan’s eight broad goals cover topics ranging from research, to keeping Minnesota’s deer populations healthy to how the DNR and the public work together on deer management.
The plan reflected a two-year planning effort that involved statewide meetings and hundreds of in-depth conversations with citizens and stakeholders. It included input from a 19-member citizen advisory committee, dozens of public input meetings and open houses, more than 1,100 submitted comments and letters from tribal governments, hunting organizations and others.
The deer plan and the mid-point assessment of the plan are available on the Minnesota DNR website (mndnr.gov/deerplan).