HR-6251-119
Subcommittee Hearings Held
Sponsored by Nicholas Begich (R-AK)
What it does
This bill would amend the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 to require the Secretary of the Interior to issue import permits for polar bear parts (excluding internal organs) taken in Canadian sport hunts before two specific cutoff dates: before February 18, 1997, for all eligible populations, and before May 15, 2008 (the date polar bears were listed as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act) for populations that were previously open to trophy import. The bill would direct the Secretary to issue these permits while bypassing several existing MMPA review requirements, including certain public notice, findings, and general take prohibition provisions.
Who benefits
American hunters who legally harvested polar bears in Canada before 2008 but have been unable to import their trophies due to the 2008 threatened species listing. Taxidermists and trophy-mounting businesses that would receive new work. Canadian Indigenous communities and outfitters whose past hunts would be retroactively validated for U.S. import purposes. Estates or heirs of hunters who harvested bears before the cutoff dates.
Who is hurt
Polar bear conservation organizations that argue any normalization of trophy trade undermines protection efforts. Wildlife agencies that would lose discretionary review authority over these specific import permits. Taxpayers who may bear administrative costs of processing a new category of expedited permits. Countries and international bodies (e.g., CITES parties) that may view the policy as inconsistent with international wildlife trade commitments.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the hunters affected by this bill legally harvested their bears under Canadian law and with U.S. regulatory approval at the time of the hunt, and that retroactively denying import permits punishes individuals for complying with rules that later changed. They contend the bill is narrowly tailored — covering only bears taken before the 2008 threatened species listing — and does not authorize any new hunting or future imports, meaning it poses no additional conservation risk to the current polar bear population.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that polar bears were listed as threatened precisely because of documented population pressures, and that allowing trophy imports — even from historical hunts — signals weakened commitment to the species' protection and may complicate U.S. obligations under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES). They contend that bypassing standard MMPA review requirements, including public notice and findings, removes important procedural safeguards that exist to ensure import decisions are scientifically grounded and publicly accountable.