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    <title>Ban Public Trapping MN -  The Blog</title>
    <link>https://www.banpubliclandtrappingmn.com</link>
    <description>Ban Public Land Trapping MN has a common goal to ban mammalian trapping on public lands and waterways in Minnesota for both protected and un-protected animals.  This does not include trapping on private property by property owners/tenants, and trappers with written permission, who abide by current state laws for protected and un-protected animals.  The goal is to restore the right of people and pets to safely access public lands and waterways that the public paid for,  correct the long-ignored issue of cruelty to animals/wanton waste, reduce the excessive costs to manage trapping subsidized by Minnesota taxpayers, increase recreational dollars being spent in Minnesota, acknowledge the fact that trapping is unnecessary for “predator control” on public lands to balance our ecosystems and remove a “for profit” business from Minnesota public lands and waterways, which sells wildlife.</description>
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      <title>Why We’re Passionate About Ending Trapping on Public Lands in Minnesota</title>
      <link>https://www.banpubliclandtrappingmn.com/why-we-are-passionate</link>
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          BanPublicLandTrappingMN.com
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          , our mission is simple: to protect Minnesota’s public lands for people, pets, and wildlife alike. We believe that these shared spaces should be safe, ethical, and welcoming to all — not places where hidden steel traps endanger the very life we come to appreciate.
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          This isn’t about being against hunters, trappers, or those who love the outdoors. It’s about drawing a fair and moral line between private activity and public responsibility.
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          Public Lands Should Be Safe for All
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          Minnesota’s public lands were created for everyone — families hiking with their kids, anglers enjoying a quiet morning by the lake, photographers capturing loons at sunrise, and yes, people walking their dogs.
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          Unfortunately, hidden traps set for fur-bearing animals can—and often do—harm unintended victims. Every year, pets are caught in legally set traps near trails, waterways, and recreation areas. These incidents don’t just harm animals; they devastate families and erode public trust in the safety of our shared lands.
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          We believe no Minnesotan should have to wonder if their next walk in the woods could end in tragedy.
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          Trapping Hurts More Than Animals
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          Trapping is often defended as a form of wildlife management or cultural tradition. We respect Minnesota’s outdoor heritage, and we recognize that responsible hunting and fishing play important roles in conservation. But trapping is different.
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          Modern steel-jaw, snare, and body-grip traps are indiscriminate—they can kill or injure any creature that happens upon them. Beyond the suffering caused, trapping disrupts ecosystems that depend on balance.
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          Beavers build wetlands that protect against droughts and floods. Foxes and coyotes naturally control rodent populations. When these keystone species are removed, the effects ripple across the landscape — impacting biodiversity, water quality, and even local agriculture.
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          Trapping doesn’t just harm the trapped. It harms the land itself.
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          Public Land Belongs to Everyone — Not Just a Few
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          When traps are set on public land, a small group’s private interest takes priority over the public good. The majority of Minnesotans don’t trap, yet they’re the ones taking the risk when they visit parks, trails, and forests.
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          It’s simply not fair that a public space—paid for and maintained by all of us—can harbor hidden devices designed to maim or kill. Public land should represent shared stewardship, not shared danger.
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          We believe in coexistence, not conflict. We can preserve Minnesota’s outdoor traditions while ensuring that public lands remain safe and humane.
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          A Path Toward Compassion and Conservation
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          Our movement isn’t about blame—it’s about progress. We believe in practical, science-based, and ethical wildlife management. Banning traps on public land doesn’t eliminate trapping entirely; it simply keeps it off the trails, parks, and recreation areas where it puts people and pets at risk.
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          Private landowners who wish to trap on their own property would still have that choice. But public land—land that belongs to all Minnesotans—should reflect our shared values: safety, compassion, and respect for life.
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          Join the Effort
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          We’re not a fringe movement—we’re parents, pet owners, veterans, hunters, hikers, and everyday Minnesotans who believe our public lands should be safe for every living being that calls them home.
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          If you agree that trapping doesn’t belong on public land, we invite you to:
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           Write a letter to the Editor
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            and share your passion to support a ban on public-land trapping.
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           Share your story
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            about why this issue matters to you.
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            working toward humane wildlife policy in Minnesota.
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          Together, we can make public lands truly public—places of safety, not suffering.
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          Minnesota’s outdoors are worth protecting.
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           Let’s ensure our trails, forests, and lakes reflect the best of who we are: compassionate, ethical, and united in care for the land we all share.
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      <pubDate>Tue, 11 Nov 2025 21:41:46 GMT</pubDate>
      <author>webmaster@evolve-systems.com</author>
      <guid>https://www.banpubliclandtrappingmn.com/why-we-are-passionate</guid>
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      <title>A Walk Gone Wrong: Why Trapping Doesn’t Belong on Minnesota’s Public Lands</title>
      <link>https://www.banpubliclandtrappingmn.com/a-walk-gone-wrong</link>
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          It was supposed to be an ordinary winter walk—a crisp afternoon on a public trail, a loyal dog running ahead through the snow, nose to the ground, tail wagging with joy. But within seconds, everything changed. What should have been a peaceful outing turned into heartbreak when a hidden trap—a conibear—snapped shut.
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          The dog never came home.
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          Stories like this aren’t rare in Minnesota. They happen quietly, often without news coverage or accountability. Legal traps, set on land that belongs to all of us, wait unseen beside trails, along waterways, and in the woods where families hike and pets roam. And every year, innocent animals—both wild and domestic—pay the price.
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          This isn’t about one dog. It’s about a system that allows suffering in spaces meant for safety.
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          The Hidden Danger on Public Land
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          Public lands are meant for everyone—hikers, hunters, birdwatchers, families, and yes, dogs. But right now, Minnesota’s regulations allow lethal traps like conibears and snares to be set in many of these shared spaces with little or no warning.
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          These traps are designed to kill quickly, but often they don’t. And they don’t discriminate between a wild animal and a beloved pet. For a dog chasing a scent or exploring brush near a trail, a legally set trap can be a death sentence.
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          The worst part? Most people don’t even know these devices are out there.
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          A Question of Fair Use
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          When we talk about public land, we talk about shared ownership and shared responsibility. But trapping privileges a few individuals at the expense of everyone else—and at the expense of safety and compassion.
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          Families shouldn’t have to fear that an afternoon walk could end in tragedy. Outdoor recreation shouldn’t come with hidden hazards. Wildlife management shouldn’t mean unnecessary suffering.
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          Allowing traps on public land isn’t fair use—it’s reckless policy.
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          Wildlife Suffers Too
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          Trapping doesn’t just harm pets. It takes a toll on Minnesota’s wildlife and ecosystems. Beavers, foxes, otters, bobcats, and countless other animals play vital roles in maintaining healthy environments. When they are removed indiscriminately, natural balances are disrupted.
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          A trapped beaver means one less wetland. A trapped fox means more rodents. The ripple effects are real and long-lasting. Trapping may once have been part of Minnesota’s heritage, but today, it’s an outdated practice that no longer aligns with our ecological understanding or moral values.
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          Time for Change
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          Minnesota prides itself on its connection to nature. We celebrate our lakes, forests, and wildlife. But if we truly respect these things, we must take responsibility for protecting them.
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          Banning traps on public lands would:
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           Prevent needless suffering of pets and wildlife.
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           Restore public confidence in outdoor safety.
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           Promote humane and science-based wildlife management.
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          It’s not about taking away tradition—it’s about taking the next step toward coexistence and compassion.
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          Moving Forward
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          The family who lost their dog didn’t set out to start a movement. They went for a walk, like so many of us do. But their loss shines a light on something that shouldn’t be happening at all.
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          No family should ever have to experience that pain. No one should fear walking the trails of Minnesota’s public lands. And no more animals—wild or domestic—should die because of an outdated and dangerous practice.
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          Trapping has no place on Minnesota’s public lands.
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           It’s time for our state to choose safety, compassion, and progress over cruelty hidden in the woods.
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      <pubDate>Thu, 23 Oct 2025 21:41:46 GMT</pubDate>
      <author>webmaster@evolve-systems.com</author>
      <guid>https://www.banpubliclandtrappingmn.com/a-walk-gone-wrong</guid>
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      <title>Why Trapping Should Be Banned on Minnesota’s Public Lands</title>
      <link>https://www.banpubliclandtrappingmn.com/why-trapping-should-be-banned</link>
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          Public lands in Minnesota belong to all of us. They are the places where families hike, children learn to love nature, and wildlife thrives freely. Yet hidden beneath this beauty lies a practice that endangers both animals and people alike—trapping. The time has come to end this outdated and dangerous activity on public lands once and for all.
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          1. Public Lands Are for Everyone, Not for Cruelty
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          Minnesota’s public lands were established to preserve natural habitats and provide safe spaces for recreation and conservation—not for private profit or cruelty. Steel-jaw traps, snares, and body-gripping traps inflict severe pain and suffering on animals, often leaving them to die slowly from blood loss, starvation, or exposure. These devices do not discriminate; they capture anything unfortunate enough to step into them—pets, endangered species, and even birds of prey.
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          Trappers often defend the practice as “tradition,” but tradition should never justify unnecessary cruelty. Our understanding of ecology and ethics has evolved, and our laws must evolve too.
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          2. Traps Endanger Pets and People
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          Every year in Minnesota, beloved family dogs are injured or killed in traps set along public trails, near waterways, and even in popular recreation areas. Most of these traps are legally set and completely unmarked—meaning there’s no warning until it’s too late.
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          For parents walking with children or dog owners enjoying the outdoors, the risk is invisible but real. It is unacceptable that public spaces meant for recreation also harbor hidden devices designed to maim and kill.
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          3. Trapping Disrupts Ecosystems
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          Minnesota’s wildlife is an interconnected web. Removing key species like beavers, foxes, or coyotes through indiscriminate trapping disrupts natural balances that help control flooding, manage rodent populations, and support biodiversity.
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          Beavers, for example, are nature’s engineers—creating wetlands that benefit hundreds of other species. When they are trapped for fur, the ecological benefits they provide disappear, leaving behind damaged habitats and altered waterways.
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          4. Economic and Ethical Alternatives Exist
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          Trapping is often defended as an economic necessity, but in truth, the fur market is in decline. Trappers make relatively little profit compared to the environmental and moral costs of their actions. Eco-tourism, wildlife photography, and outdoor recreation generate far more revenue and jobs for Minnesota communities without harming a single animal.
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          We can preserve tradition through wildlife stewardship and education—not through suffering.
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          5. The Majority of Minnesotans Support Wildlife Protection
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          Polls consistently show that most Minnesotans oppose recreational and commercial trapping, especially on public lands. The public wants humane coexistence, not cruelty in the woods and wetlands we all share. Legislators should listen to their constituents and take action to align our policies with our values.
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          Minnesota’s public lands should be sanctuaries, not killing fields.
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          Banning trapping on these lands is not just an environmental issue—it’s a moral one. It’s about what kind of legacy we want to leave for future generations: one of cruelty and indifference, or one of compassion and respect for life.
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      <pubDate>Thu, 02 Oct 2025 21:41:46 GMT</pubDate>
      <author>webmaster@evolve-systems.com</author>
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