Agriculture committee outlines priorities: non-certified pregnancy testing, electronic ID, orphaned water rights
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Summary
The joint agricultural committee proposed five interim priorities including non-certified cattle pregnancy testing, examining electronic identification and metal-tag options, preventing orphaned water rights, state-land recreation rules, and fence-out laws; co-chairs signaled the work could yield about three bills next session.
The joint Agricultural, State & Public Lands and Water Resources Committee presented five interim priorities to the Management Council on April 1, focusing on producer flexibility, livestock identification, and water-rights issues.
Co-chair (Agriculture) described the committee’s top priority as allowing non‑certified pregnancy testing by trained, non-veterinarian personnel to address veterinary shortages; the committee plans to examine statutory models from neighboring states and consider where certification is required for marketed animals. The committee also proposed a technical review of electronic identification systems for cattle and emphasized keeping a metal tag option available; Representative Bair and co-chair Banks discussed House Bill 229 and supplier availability for metal tags, with Banks saying the committee intends to preserve that option.
Another priority is to study orphaned water rights emerging from subdivision practices and to consider ways to return or repurpose those rights so they are not lost; co-chairs said that study would revisit unfinished interim work and could lead to clarifying legislation. The committee also listed state-land recreation rules and fence-out/fence-in livestock statutes as standing priorities to clarify practice and reduce future conflicts.
Members asked whether these studies could translate to bills; co-chairs estimated the work might yield roughly three draft bills depending on interim findings. The Management Council accepted the presentation and moved on to other committee reports.

