A continued push to end a brutal form of motorized over-snow hunting did not gain traction with Wyoming lawmakers studying bills ahead of the 2026 legislative session, despite a Sublette County incident that shined an unprecedented spotlight on the practice and multiple nominations for a ban. 

The idea of prohibiting the use of snowmobiles to kill fleeing wildlife appeared twice on the list of proposed topics that were considered by the Legislature’s Travel, Recreation, Wildlife and Cultural Resources Committee. 

“Such conduct is cruel, unsportsmanlike, and damages Wyoming’s reputation as a responsible manager of wildlife,” stated an idea submitted by Rep. Karlee Provenza, a Laramie Democrat. “A vehicle should never be used as a weapon against wildlife.”

Rep. Mike Schmid, a La Barge Republican who tried twice at a ban during the Legislature’s most recent general session, likewise submitted an idea to study ending the practice of “predator whacking.” Schmid’s proposal — like his failed bill — included a concession to the livestock industry. Specifically, his proposal was for a bill prohibiting the use of vehicles as a weapon to intentionally kill wildlife on public land, so that woolgrowers and cattlemen could continue running over coyotes and other predators on private land to protect their herds — a tactic they say they need.  

Rep. Mike Schmid, R- La Barge, during the Wyoming Legislature’s 2025 budget session. (Mike Vanata/WyoFile)

Recently, in the wake of committee-sponsored bills dying at historically high rates, the Legislature revamped its interim topic selection process. Now there are fewer interim meetings, and committee chairs — not the body’s Management Council — get the final say over what topics to study during the 10 or so months between legislative sessions. Up against two dozen other ideas, Provenza’s and Schmid’s proposals to take a long look at a form of Wyoming recreation that’s been targeted even at the federal level were not selected. 

“That didn’t even come close to rising to the top,” said Rep. Andrew Byron, a Hoback Junction-area Republican who co-chairs the Travel, Recreation, Wildlife and Cultural Resources Committee with Casper Republican Sen. Bill Landen. “We had our committee members rank their priorities.” 

Rep. Andrew Byron, R-Jackson, during the Wyoming Legislature’s 2025 budget session. (Mike Koshmrl/WyoFile)

If snowmobiling over wildlife rose into the top 10 prioritized ideas, Byron might have hand-picked the topic for interim study, he told WyoFile. 

“But it was not,” he said. 

There was a Feb. 26 meeting where lawmakers, lobbyists and members of the public pitched interim ideas to the committee. Schmid did not speak in support of his proposal during the gathering. 

Provenza deferred to a co-signer of her idea: Kristin Combs, who directs the Wyoming Wildlife Advocates.

 “Our values in Wyoming are one way, and our laws are another,” she told lawmakers. “I think that it’d be really great for the committee to take a look, a deep dive.” 

A coyote runs from people chasing it on snowmobiles. Videos that show people running down wildlife while riding snowmobiles can be found online with relative ease. (YouTube screenshot)

At the time, Combs praised a bill brought by Byron that stiffened penalties for keeping crippled predators alive — a measure that was a direct response to an infamous February 2024 incident where Daniel resident Cody Roberts brought a juvenile wolf badly injured by a snowmobile into a bar. 

That legislation became law, but it does not criminalize the act of running over animals with snowmobiles — it does, however, specify that animals must be swiftly dispatched after being struck.

A prior, related bill that emerged from a subset of the committee  — the “Treatment of Predators Working Group” — died after language clarifying that it’s in fact legal to run over wolves, coyotes and other predators in Wyoming incited outrage. 

(Screenshot from Instagram)

Without success, Wyoming lawmakers have been pushing to prohibit recreationally running over animals with snowmobiles for many years. Rep. Mike Yin, a Jackson Democrat, sponsored a bill in 2019, though it did not get as far as a committee hearing. Later that year, Yin tried to convince the Travel, Recreation, Wildlife and Cultural Resources Committee to take up the topic, but the idea fell flat. 

Six years later, the proposal got the same response — even after the state’s legal embrace of the practice attracted global ire. 

While it’s clear a committee bill will not come out of the interim session, Schmid, Provenza or a coalition of lawmakers could still bring a personal bill during the Legislature’s 2026 session. It will face longer odds of becoming law because it’s a budget year, requiring all non-budget bills to earn two-thirds support for introduction. 

Although recreationally snowmobiling over wildlife is likely to remain part of Wyoming for the foreseeable future, a discussion about its legality is something that needs to happen, Wyoming Wildlife Federation Government Affairs Director Jess Johnson told WyoFile in a text message. 

Jess Johnson, government affairs director for the Wyoming Wildlife Federation, in 2025. (Mike Koshmrl/WyoFile)

“Statute is one of the ways we as Wyoming present ourselves to the world, and to each other — it is important that the optics match the ethics I know most Wyoming citizens and hunters have,” Johnson said. “We also must be willing to be at the table and listen to our neighbors in agriculture and their needs.”

There’s no clear solution just yet, she added. 

“But something needs to change,” Johnson said, “and we need to do it thoughtfully, creatively, collaboratively and in the spirit of the Wyoming we want to see into the future.”  

Mike Koshmrl reports on Wyoming's wildlife and natural resources. Prior to joining WyoFile, he spent nearly a decade covering the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem’s wild places and creatures for the Jackson...

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  1. I will boycott the despicable state of Wyoming for the rest of my life in any other state that adopts this form of animal control. This is beyond sick. Those lawmakers should be utterly ashamed of themselves

  2. My friends and relatives are pressing me to go to them for visits instead of having them come to WY. They were excited about the opportunity until the national exposure of our animal cruelty attitude, especially the “recreational” aspect. Now they consider WY such a hideously barbaric environment that they have no interest in it as a tourist destination. And this is in family that for generations has considered hunting for food a reasonable activity!

  3. I will never enter Wyoming again or spend one dime because of their snowmobile whacking laws. Ridiculous and outdated considering technology we have today to help our ranchers

  4. I’m canadian. I grew up in a agricultural family. People killed coyotes the same way in the 70’s here in Canada. But Canada progressed USA regressed. Most of us up here living in igloo’s can’t believe how dumb (yes I wrote dumb) the American population has become. You People in the USA are actually really dumb. I love calling you dumb and I’ll troll every USA resident I can that travels through my province while on your anual pilgrimage to Alaska. Yes you are all completely dumb dumb dumb. Even democrats for doing nothing in the wake of your new king. Kid Rock and Elon Musk (a illegal imagrent) run your country. What should we call you smart? American buffoons. Insulting and arogent the American way. Grow up and except predators. If you have to kill it redneck do it humane with a bullet. Dumb Dumb Dumb just like your orange king. Drive safe ya’ll

    1. Are you sure you’re Canadian?
      Most Canadians I know arent this insulting and rude. :-[

    2. That’s some seriously funny stuff. Doesn’t make any sense, but that kinda makes it funny that an illiterate Canadian has the cajones to insult ANYONE.

  5. I feel sorry for the lonely souls who have no respect for God’s creation.you people are losers,the whole country are ashamed of your state,and your state of mind.

  6. Come on Wyo, let’s try to catch up with the 20th century already (not to mention to 21st).

  7. Anyway, anyhow, you label or discuss this it’s inherently wrong. Predators are a natural and necessary part of a healthy ecosystem. And healthy ecosystems are what defines Wyoming. For the short term profit motivated ranching industry to be guiding policies that shape the environment is dangerous. Range losses can have multiple causes including predation, and just like all others it’s the cost of doing business. If any indivodual finds the cost is too much the find another business. In addition it’s inhumane. If this were done to a human it would be considered murder, cruel and unusual etc etc. Why then, is OK to do this to another living thing?

  8. “Lawmakers” may be hesitant to make this illegal due to the definition of cruel. LOTS of things currently legal could be described as cruel, hunting, fishing, trapping, etc. How many people have tapped mice or worse poisoned them?

    Where do laws against “cruelty” end, and what animals are protected vs. not?

      1. It’s opinion and perception. Trapping isnt really sport, and animals die far slower deaths.

  9. I testified on zoom during the legislative session on the aptly though sadly named “Kill Bill”. Of course it is still a horrible practice and this passed bill did nothing to end this killing spree. Knowing it would pass my comment was how would anyone get caught and fined for not killing an animal right away? I said it was still a black eye for WY that we allow this. Such a depressing moment especially because after I testified I was told that I spoke for too long (maybe 3 minutes) and I realized it was mainly because I was a white woman from Jackson who was against.the bill. Senator Boner was able to ask multiple questions without ever being told enough. Double standard for sure.

  10. Once again, the species that should know better, proves itself to be the most vicious.

  11. Thank you, WyoFile, for keeping this story alive. Brutality is not the Wyoming Way. We will continue fighting to ban this practice – in Wyoming and nationally.

  12. What you are doing is inhumane. They are predators but part of nature and the food chain. Predators should not be ran down and killed in an inhumane way. Let nature take care of itself. Humans intentionally run down and kill the predators is disturbing. You are not doing this to eat the animal or for survival. You are doing this because you get pleasure from killing and torturing animals. The predators that you do this to are just animals eating to survive in their environment. Leave them alone. Your treatment is interfering with nature and inhumane!

  13. So livestock producers say this is a necessary tool….so be it. Make the rule so that it is illegal on public land only, between the months of Nov 1 and April 30. Livestock on most grazing units, if not all, have been removed by then and most likely grazing units will not open before the end of April. They can still run down predators on private land during snow season and on all lands May 1 thru Oct 31. Solved! Have these people never learned the term “compromise”.

  14. Cruel? Have these bleeding hearts ever seen a half-eaten alive calf? If you have nothing better to do than cry for how (and why) a predator is killed you, my friend, NEED A LIFE!

    1. I testified on zoom during the legislative session on the aptly though sadly named “Kill Bill”. Of course it is still a horrible practice and this passed bill did nothing to end this killing spree. Knowing it would pass my comment was how would anyone get caught and fined for not killing an animal right away? I said it was still a black eye for WY that we allow this. Such a depressing moment especially because after I testified I was told that I spoke for too long (maybe 3 minutes) and I realized it was mainly because I was a white woman from Jackson who was against.the bill. Senator Boner was able to ask multiple questions without ever being told enough. Double standard for sure.

    2. The difference is the predators are killing to eat. Nature can get ugly. Running them down on snowmobiles is cruel and barbaric. Maybe a few of the “hunters” need to be ran over…maybe then this practice will end.