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Showing posts with the label bowhunting

Joplin Urban Bowhunting: What Happens When the Arrow Misses

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  A comparative look at Missouri’s urban hunting programs, the risks of wounded wildlife, and what residents must prepare for as Joplin, MO legalizes bowhunting within city limits.   Introduction: Why This Article Matters Autumn in Joplin, MO is a season of quiet migration. The leaves turn, the air sharpens, and the deer return moving through creek beds, fence lines, and wooded corridors that have shaped their patterns for generations. It’s a time when late-born fawns still trail behind their mothers, learning how to forage among fallen acorns and shelter beneath thinning brush.   But this year, the season carries a new risk. As Joplin, MO moves forward with its urban bowhunting ordinance, residents deserve to know what similar programs have produced in other Missouri cities. While officials cite population control and safety, the reality is more complicated and often more painful. This article examines the outcomes of urban hunting programs in Columbia, Bran...

Urban Hunting in Joplin: What the City Won’t Say

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  Uncovering the overlooked risks, biological contradictions, and emotional fallout behind Joplin’s urban deer hunting ordinance. When Joplin’s city council approved its urban bow hunting ordinance on June 16, 2025, they cited neighboring cities Springfield, Columbia, Branson, and Cape Girardeau as models of success. But extensive research reveals a different story: repealed ordinances, wounded wildlife, public backlash, and biological red flags. This article documents the dangerous gap between policy and lived reality and why Joplin’s wooded corridors deserve better.    What the Council Claimed City officials stated the ordinance would: Reduce deer-vehicle collisions Minimize property damage Prevent the spread of Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) Mirror “successful” programs in other Missouri cities They referenced Branson, Columbia and Springfield , as examples of safe, effective urban hunts. Assistant Police Chief Brian Lewis called ...