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House adopts temporary pause on CWD feeding rules after heated debate, 63–30
Summary
The House passed HCR 4, which suspends certain Louisiana Administrative Code feeding and baiting restrictions in chronic wasting disease control areas for 18 months. Sponsor Rep. McCormick argued the pause protects hunting traditions and local businesses; colleagues warned it could increase disease spread.
The Louisiana House voted to adopt HCR 4 on April 23, approving an 18‑month suspension of selected administrative-code rules that restrict supplemental feeding and baiting in chronic wasting disease (CWD) control areas.
Representative McCormick, the sponsor, told members HCR 4 "puts a temporary pause on the feeding ban of supplementing feeding and baiting restrictions which conflict with traditional hunting practice and can reduce hunter participation," adding that the restrictions also hurt local farmers and retail establishments. He said some feeding restrictions hinder efforts to treat wild hogs and reduce rural property values.
Several members questioned whether allowing supplemental feeding could increase the risk of CWD spread. Representative Bakkelov asked whether the resolution would override rules administered by the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries and whether it risked spreading CWD; McCormick replied that the suspension is intended and that he believes allowing feeding in this context "will have the opposite effect" of concentrating animals — a point that drew pushback during the exchange.
After questions and a brief closing, the clerk reported the result: 63 ayes, 30 nays, and the resolution was adopted.
Why it matters: CWD is a contagious neurological disease among cervids (deer, elk) that is managed through a state regulatory framework; suspending feeding restrictions in CWD control areas alters that management approach and may affect wildlife health, hunter behavior, local businesses and landowners. The resolution pauses administrative rules rather than enacting permanent statutory change; implementation and monitoring will be the next steps.
Next steps: HCR 4’s suspension takes effect as provided in the resolution. The House did not adopt a companion statutory change in this session; agencies and stakeholders will monitor disease indicators and any effects on hunting and agriculture.
Transcript evidence: floor debate beginning with Representative McCormick’s presentation (SEG 971 onward) and the vote tally announced by the clerk (SEG 1043–1044).
