“We’ll Be Back” Vows Wildlife Funding Coalition

A fox looks back at the camera
Photo by David Willingham
Contact:    
Danielle Moser, Oregon Wild

SALEM, OR – In the final hours of the 2025 legislative session, a landmark bill to fund wildlife conservation fell short—not for lack of public support, bipartisan backing, or legislative merit, but because of cynical obstruction from a small group of Republican senators. Democratic leadership in the Senate had the power to stop them, but chose to give in.

HB 2977, which passed the Oregon House with a three-fifths bipartisan majority and cleared the Senate Rules Committee, would have modestly increased Oregon’s statewide transient lodging tax—currently among the lowest in the country—to fund urgently needed wildlife conservation. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) has identified nearly 300 species in decline, yet lacks the general fund resources to act.

“This bill was built on compromise, unity, and a shared love for Oregon’s wild places,” said Danielle Moser, Wildlife Program Manager at Oregon Wild. “It brought together hunters, anglers, conservationists, and rural community leaders, people who often don’t agree. And it showed what’s possible when we put politics aside. Unfortunately, a few obstructionist senators decided to stand in the way of that hope.”

Senators Daniel Bonham and Cedric Hayden used procedural gimmicks to block a floor vote on the bill, despite growing momentum and a written minority report ready to be set aside. While a few Republican legislators defied their caucus to vote for HB 2977, the obstructionists prevailed—for now.

Still, advocates say the coalition and public engagement behind this bill have created a wave of political will that won’t disappear.

“Every legislator and staffer I talked to had heard from Oregonians about this bill,” said Casey Kulla with Oregon Wild. “Phone lines rang off the hook. Inboxes were flooded. People showed up. This was grassroots democracy at its best, and it worked, even if the final vote didn’t happen. We are just getting started.”

While Republican obstruction was central to the bill’s defeat, conservation advocates are also pointing to internal resistance among some Democrats, and Democratic leadership’s decision not to advance the bill to the floor, as a missed opportunity that can and must be corrected.

“We’re disappointed,” Moser said. “But we’re not deterred. We’ve built something powerful. Next session, we’re coming back stronger.”

Oregon Wild and the statewide coalition behind HB 2977 are already preparing for the 2026 short session. 

“The need to fund wildlife and their habitats remains, and the broad public support has never been clearer. This was the closest Oregon has come in decades,” Kulla added. “And next time, we’re going to finish the job.”

SUPPORT FOR HB 2977

American Bird Conservancy

American Sportfishing Association

Backcountry Hunters and Anglers

Bird Alliance of Oregon

Blue Mountains Forest Partners

Cascadia Wildlands

Center for Biological Diversity

Central Oregon LandWatch

Chintimini Wildlife Center

Congressional Sportsmen’s Foundation

Defenders of Wildlife

Elakha Alliance

Environment Oregon

Great Old Broads for Wilderness

HOWL for Wildlife

Humane Voters Oregon

Humane World for Animals

Kalmiopsis Audubon Society

Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center

Lane County Audubon Society

Mid-Willamette Bird Alliance

Native Fish Society

Northwest Guides and Anglers

Association

Oceana

Oregon Association of Shooting Ranges

Oregon Coast Alliance

Oregon Hunters Association

Oregon League of Conservation Voters

Oregon Natural Desert Association

Oregon Trappers Association

Oregon Wild

Oregon Wild Sheep Foundation

Oregon Wildlife Coalition

Oregon Wildlife Foundation

Oregon Wildlife Rehabilitation Association

Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation

Rogue Riverkeeper

Salem Audubon Society

SEIU Local 503

Surfrider Foundation

The Conservation Angler

The Habitat Institute

The Wildlife Society, Oregon Chapter

Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership

Think Wild

Trout Unlimited, Oregon Council

WaterWatch of Oregon

Western Environmental Law Center

Western Invasives Network

Western Watersheds Project

Wildlands Network

Willamette Riverkeeper

Xerces Society

350PDX

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