Lake Maumelle

New AGFC, CAW agreement adds 2,395 acres of public hunting access

The Community Bicyclist

LITTLE ROCK — Commissioners with the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission today authorized Director Austin Booth to amend a long-term lease agreement with Central Arkansas Water to expand the Maumelle River Wildlife Management Area in Pulaski County by 2,395 acres.

According to Ben Batten, AGFC deputy director, Maumelle River WMA was created in July 2010 when CAW agreed to allow hunting and other outdoor recreational activities on its property around Lake Maumelle with AGFC’s oversight. In July 2013 the two organizations signed a 99-year lease agreement for $1 million to ensure public hunting access on 18,861 acres around Lake Maumelle.

“Previously to that point there was no hunting allowed on that property at all and it allowed for some small game hunting and limited archery hunting for deer,” Batten said. 

Map: An amended lease agreement will open more than 2,300 acres of property in Central Arkansas to public hunting and outdoor recreation.

Last year, CAW approached the AGFC with an offer to reset the 99-year lease and add 2,395 acres the water utility had acquired to protect the watershed since the initial agreement. AGFC will pay CAW an additional $226,825 under the amended lease agreement.

“It equates to a cost of 54 cents per acre per year, which is an incredibly good value,” Batten said.  

The amended lease agreement also will expand the portion of the WMA where small-game hunting is allowed. Previously, small game hunters could only access 1,279 acres of the property. Now hunters may pursue small game on an additional 6,864 acres, most of which had been reserved for archery deer hunting only.

This lease agreement and its importance to the agency’s 5-year strategic plan was included in the many achievements AGFC Director Austin Booth spoke about in his address to the Commission

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“This (agreement) means that we will have reached roughly half of our 5-year goal (5,000 additional acres of public access) within six months,” Booth said. 

Securing federal funding for hatchery renovations, recruiting the largest cadet class in the agency’s Enforcement Division, providing body cameras to game wardens, and working hand-in-hand with duck hunters to begin the arduous task of renovating Arkansas’s famous Greentree reservoirs also were highlighted in Booth’s update from the first six months since the agency’s 5-year strategic plan, “Natural State Tomorrow,” was unveiled. 

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“But we are not resting on our six-month laurels,” Booth said. “To be clear, the greatest accomplishment this agency has had in the past six months is momentum.”

Commissioners also unanimously approved another land acquisition during today’s meeting, this time at Frog Bayou WMA in northwest Arkansas. According to the signed minute order, the Commission gave Booth the authority to complete a purchase agreement for up to 165 acres of property adjacent to the existing WMA boundary for a price not to exceed $527,0000. This will expand the amount of public access to wetland habitat in the Arkansas River Valley for both hunting and watchable wildlife pursuits and increase the agency’s ability to provide valuable winter habitat for migrating birds. 

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