• An animal rights group is challenging a recent Michigan Natural Resources decision to allow the killing of coyotes year-round
  • The NRC voted on Jan. 14 to create a new management season that, combined with a hunting season, would allow for coyotes to be killed year-round for any reason
  • Humane World for Animals said that decision was not based on science, as required by state law

Humane World for Animals, formerly the Humane Society, on Tuesday sued the Michigan Natural Resources Commission, hoping to undo the commission’s recent decision to allow coyotes to be killed year-round. 

The commission, which regulates hunting and fishing in the state, voted on Jan. 14 to create a new management season that, combined with a hunting season, would essentially allow coyotes to be killed year-round for any reason. 

The animal rights group wants the Ingham County Circuit Court to walk back that decision and reinstate a three-month “quiet period” during which coyotes can’t be hunted.

The Michigan Department of Natural Resources and DNR Director Scott Bowen also are named in the suit.

Humane World for Animals says the commission’s January vote wasn’t based on science and happened too quickly after its March 2024 decision to shorten the season to nine months. 

“Michigan law requires the Natural Resources Commission to use sound scientific management when making decisions about how to manage the state’s wildlife, including coyotes,” Margie Robinson, senior staff attorney for Humane World for Animals, said in a written statement. “Scientific research shows that extending indiscriminate killing of coyotes won’t reduce their populations or address perceived conflicts with farm animals.”

Members of the Natural Resources Commission said they could not comment on pending litigation.

This is not the first time the commission has been sued by someone arguing they made a decision that did not follow science.

Sign up for our outdoors newsletter

Want more coverage like this delivered directly into your inbox? Sign up for the Bridge Michigan Outdoors newsletter here.

In March 2024, the commission voted to shorten the coyote hunting season from year-round to nine months to allow coyote mothers three months to raise their pups. Two hunting and trapping advocacy groups filed lawsuits saying the Natural Resources Commission’s decision was in response to social pressure and not based on science. An Ingham County Circuit Court judge ruled on that suit in June, saying that the commission’s decision to shorten the season had been legally sound.

At its last meeting on Jan. 14, the Natural Resources Commission passed an amendment that shortened the coyote hunting and trapping season but created a new “management season,” the first of its kind, to allow coyotes to be killed on public or private lands for any reason. 

“We know that coyotes can cause problems,” Natural Resources Commission Chair Becky Humphries told Bridge Michigan after the vote. “We’re trying to free up the reins and provide that opportunity and yet still be respectful of the resource and the users out there.”

​​Coyotes could already be killed on private property year-round if they threatened or damaged livestock.

The new coyote management season is slated to run from March 2 to Oct. 14 and the new hunting and trapping season will run from Oct. 15 to March 1, together encompassing a year. 

Timeline of events

  • 2016: In an attempt to better control coyotes, the Michigan Natural Resources Commission voted to extend the hunting season for the animals from nine months to year-round.
  • March 14, 2024: The NRC voted to ban coyote hunting between April 16 and July 14, decreasing the season by three months. 
  • March 2024: Michigan United Conservation Clubs and Michigan Trappers and Predator Callers filed lawsuits against the NRC for making a decision they said was not based on science. Those suits were later consolidated.
  • March 13, 2025: The NRC introduced an amendment to extend the coyote hunting season, but didn’t vote to extend the season.
  • May 8, 2025: The NRC postponed indefinitely voting on the amendment to extend the coyote season
  • June 3, 2025: An Ingham County Circuit Court judge ruled the shortened coyote hunting season stands, is based on science.
  • June 5, 2025: Bills to allow year-round coyote hunting were introduced in the Michigan House and Senate.
  • Jan. 14, 2026: The NRC created a new management season that, in conjunction with a hunting season, would allow coyotes to be killed for any reason year-round.

Creative Commons License

Republish our articles for free, online or in print, under our Republication Guidelines. Questions? Email republishing@bridgemi.com