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Boots on the Ground

On April 30, Congressman Zinke announced the House passage of the Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026, commonly known as the Farm Bill. A comprehensive piece of legislation designed to strengthen American agriculture, support rural communities, and improve forest and land management. The bill includes six provisions sponsored or co-sponsored by Zinke, notably codifying a permanent fix to the disastrous Cottonwood Decision that has strangled forest management in Montana for over a decade.

“The Farm Bill gives farmers and ranchers the certainty they need to keep doing what they do best and keeps the communities around them strong and stable,” said Zinke. “It preserves food assistance for those who truly need it while cutting waste and fraud and making sure families have access to nutritious food. It supports rural economies, strengthens basic infrastructure so it actually works for the people who live there, and helps folks get access to the health services they rely on without having to leave their towns. It also pushes smarter forest management to reduce wildfire risk and keep our lands healthier for the long haul. At the end of the day, this bill is about keeping American agriculture and small towns strong and built to last.”

The Farm Bill, typically reauthorized every five years, has been operating under an extension since 2023. This legislation reauthorizes and modernizes key USDA programs through 2031, providing long-term stability for producers.

Key provisions of the Farm Bill include:

  • Expands access to credit and risk management tools for farmers and ranchers facing tough economic conditions
  • Improves SNAP with stronger accountability and a greater focus on healthier outcomes, without increasing federal spending
  • Bolsters support for specialty crop producers and domestic fruit and vegetable production
  • Streamlines conservation programs and strengthens management of working lands and federal forests
  • Enhances export promotion efforts to help address the agricultural trade deficit
  • Modernizes rural development and energy programs and increases investment in research
  • Protects interstate livestock commerce and maintains access to critical crop protection tools

The legislation is supported by more than 500 agricultural and stakeholder organizations and maintains budget neutrality while preserving savings achieved through the One Big Beautiful Bill. 

Zinke provisions included in the bill

Habitat Connectivity on Working Lands Act

The bill directs USDA to provide more resources and incentives for farmers and ranchers to improve habitat connectivity and wildlife movement on working lands, prioritizing wildlife corridors within critical conservation areas under the Regional Conservation Partnership Program and building on efforts like Wyoming’s Big Game Conservation Partnership. It encourages practices like virtual fencing to better manage livestock and expand USDA research and guidance on connectivity tools. Congressman Zinke has long led on this issue, including as Secretary of the Interior when he signed Secretarial Order 3362 in 2018 to work with western states on improving big-game winter range and migration corridors on federal lands while respecting state authority and private property rights, a framework that helped states like Wyoming protect key mule deer migration corridors in southwest Wyoming.

FIR Act (Cottonwood Fix)

The bill provides a permanent legislative fix to the Cottonwood court decision by limiting when the U.S. Forest Service must reinitiate consultation with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to cases involving substantial new developments or changes to forest management plans. It will reduce delays that have stalled logging and forest management projects, address backlogs, and improve wildfire response and habitat management across Montana and the West. Zinke has previously introduced similar legislation in 2016 and 2023, both of which drew bipartisan and conservation support.

The Cottonwood decision stems from a 2015 ruling by Obama-appointed U.S. District Judge Dana Christensen in Cottonwood Environmental Law Center v. U.S. Forest Service, after a lawsuit brought by the Bozeman-based environmental group the Cottonwood Environmental Law Center. The decision has blocked common-sense forest management like thinning and fuels reduction, increasing wildfire risk while undercutting a key part of Montana’s economy. 

Legislation cosponsored by Zinke included in the Bill

The bill now heads to the Senate for a vote.

Read the full press release here.


On April 28, Rep. Ryan Zinke and Rep. Troy Downing (MT-02), as well as Senators Steve Daines and Tim Sheehy sent a letter to the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation requesting funding to repair the St. Mary Diversion Dam and Canal.

“We write to urge full and fair consideration of the St. Mary Diversion Dam and Canal of the Milk River Project (Project) in northwestern Montana to be an authorized recipient of funding as appropriated in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, titled under “Water Conveyance and Surface Water Storage Enhancement.”

When the Canal was originally constructed in 1915, it had the capacity to divert up to 850 cubic feet per second (cfs). However, due to its age, capacity has declined to only 600 cfs. This reduction in capacity is leading to a loss of more than 100-million-acre feet that’s flowing across the border into Canada every day…

…While two out of the five Drops have been successfully replaced, failure of the remaining three is imminent. As you may know, Drop 5 failed in 2020 and the Siphon failed in 2025, leading to the complete loss of the irrigation season for local and regional producers, resulting in hundreds of millions of dollars lost. The failure of any three remaining Drops could once again lead to catastrophic failure and severe economic loss.

Funding under “Water Conveyance and Surface Water Storage Enhancement” was designated specifically for “construction and associated activities that restore or increase the capacity or use of existing conveyance facilities constructed by the Bureau of Reclamation.” The current fragility of the system speaks to the dire need to restore this key infrastructure to protect our precious water resources,” they wrote in the letter.

Read the full letter here.


On April 29, the House Appropriations Committee approved the FY2027 Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act last week, and Montana's agricultural community stands to benefit. The bill passed 35 to 25 and continues critical investments in rural development loan programs and animal and plant health programs that Montana producers count on every season.

The legislation also takes strong steps to protect American agriculture from foreign threats by improving tracking of foreign-owned agricultural land. The bill also rolls back Biden-era regulations that dictated how poultry and livestock producers raise and market their animals, giving Montana ranchers back the freedom to run their operations as they see fit.

The bill now goes to the House floor.

See Congressman Zinke’s Community Project Funding requests included in the bill below:

  • Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes, $187,500 – Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes Emergency Comms
  • Flathead County, $2,325,000 – City of Columbia Falls Wastewater Treatment Plant Improvement Phase 1 
  • Lake County, $69,000 - Charlo Volunteer Fire Department 
  • Lake County, $259,612 – Lake County Office of Emergency Management Communication Tower Replacements 
  • Lincoln County, $1,000,000 – City of Libby Water Filtration Phase 1
  • Lake County, $1,000,000 – Ronan Wastewater Treatment Facility Upgrade Phase 1

Read the full text of the bill HERE.



Commander Zinke in the News

The Hill

"The policy is when the president is shot at or in threat, you get him down, you get him out, you wrap him with a ballistic blanket, and you get him out of there,” said Zinke."

Newsmax

"Zinke expressed cautious optimism about reported negotiations between Israel and Lebanon, calling them "necessary," but he emphasized that any agreement with Beirut does not guarantee compliance from Hezbollah."

Newsnation

“'I think the region [the Middle East] would be so much better off without Iran supporting Hezbollah, Hamas and destruction,' Zinke said."


Press Releases

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