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Archery Season, 2025-2026 Why Missouri’s Bowhunting Policy Deserves Scrutiny

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    Despite thousands of deer harvested during archery season, Missouri exempts bowhunters from mandatory CWD testing even in confirmed disease zones like Joplin. In Missouri, bowhunting season opens on September 15 and spans nearly four months, making it one of the longest and most active hunting periods in the state. Yet despite its scale, archery harvests are exempt from mandatory testing for Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) a fatal neurological illness that spreads silently through deer populations and persists in soil, plants, and equipment. This exemption is especially concerning in cities like Joplin, which sits within the CWD Management Zone following a confirmed CWD-positive deer in Jasper County in 2023. Both Jasper and Newton Counties were added to the zone, triggering expanded surveillance and funding for disease mitigation. But the state’s testing policy doesn’t reflect the urgency of the threat. According to the Missouri Department of Conservation’s 2024–20...

Not Just Deer: The Human Cost of Urban Hunting

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  Urban hunting ordinances in Joplin, Missouri expose a hidden danger homeless encampments in wooded parcels where poachers and bowhunters operate. This article reveals the human cost of policy gaps, forged permission slips, and silent hunters in shared spaces. As Joplin’s urban bow hunting ordinance takes effect, a quiet danger grows in the woods one that few officials are willing to name. It’s not just about deer. It’s about people. Local advocate Brian Evans recently shared photos and commentary on his public Facebook page, documenting homeless encampments in wooded areas across Joplin . His post, titled Joplin’s Homeless Crisis: The High Cost of Enabling , describes how public spaces and private parcels have become informal shelters for unhoused individuals many of whom live in tents, brush shelters, or abandoned structures near creeks and rail lines. These same wooded parcels may be to bow hunting under Joplin’s ordinance, which allows harvests on private land of one acr...

The Hunting Permission Loophole No One’s Talking About

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    Joplin’s urban bowhunting     ordinance requires hunters to carry written permission from the landowner but there’s no standardized form, no verification system, and no requirement for notarization. That means a poacher could: Print a fake letter claiming permission Forge a signature Hunt on wooded private property without the landowner ever knowing This loophole is especially dangerous on wooded parcels over one acre , where visibility is low and enforcement is rare. These lots often unfenced, unmonitored, or owned by absentee landlords become easy targets for disguised trespass. “Nobody’s checking,” said one Joplin resident. “And if they are, it’s after the deer’s already harvested.” Without a notarized document or city-verified registry, anyone with a bow and a story can claim legitimacy. And once the arrow flies, the damage is done.   What Landowners Can Do to Protect Their Property To prevent unauthorized hunting and protect re...

CWD in Missouri: Why Some Deer Hunters Say No

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    Why Chronic Wasting Disease is changing hunter behavior and what it means for Joplin’s urban hunt. Across Missouri, deer hunters are quietly making a choice: to sit out the season. While the Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) continues to promote its deer management programs, including urban bow hunting ordinances like the one passed in Joplin in 2025, on Joplin MO   many hunters are opting out not because of lack of interest, but because of growing concern over Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD). CWD is a fatal neurological disease that affects deer, elk, and other cervids. It spreads through saliva, urine, feces, and carcasses, and it can persist in soil and vegetation for years. According to the research I found that a  deer infected with CWD may appear perfectly healthy, and the only way to confirm infection is through post-mortem testing.  In 2023, a CWD-positive deer was detected in Jasper County, prompting MDC to add both Jasper and Newton C...

Fix Joplin’s Bowhunting Law Before CWD Hits Your Yard

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    Joplin’s 60‑ft bowhunting buffer risks CWD contamination in yards. Learn why a 200‑ft buffer and 3‑acre minimum could protect residents. A Risk Hiding in Plain Sight In Joplin, Missouri, a wounded deer can cross the city’s 60‑foot safety buffer in seconds. If that deer is carrying Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD)  a fatal, contagious illness in deer and elk your lawn could be contaminated for years. This isn’t a hypothetical. Joplin sits inside a CWD Management Zone , and the city’s 2025 urban bowhunting ordinance allows hunting on 1‑acre parcels with minimal distance from homes, schools, parks, and property lines. That combination puts residents, pets, and property at unnecessary risk. Why 60 Feet Isn’t Enough A 60‑foot buffer is shorter than many driveways. In the seconds after a misplaced arrow, a wounded deer can easily cross that distance into a yard, playground, or public trail. Once there, the deer may shed saliva, urine, or blood all of which can...

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...