DENVER–Colorado’s Division of Parks and Wildlife (CPW) is accepting public comment on a proposed statewide ban on fur sales that recently won initial approval by wildlife commissioners, despite staff recommendations against the idea.
As previously reported by Complete Colorado, The Center for Biological Diversity, an animal activist group from Tucson Arizona, has been relentlessly petitioning the Colorado Parks and Wildlife Commission to ban the sale, barter, and trade, of wildlife fur in Colorado.
The Center filed its first petition in June 2025. While that effort failed to make it past commissioners, the same petition was refiled in 2026.
The petition aims to amend CPW regulations to prohibit the sale of fur from all 17 listed Colorado furbearing species, with some exceptions for hand tied fishing flies, felted fur western hats that were crafted with heritage techniques to “promote cultural sustainability,” and fur that is sold for scientific or educational research.
CPW commissioners heard the petition at a March 4-5 meeting. Despite the push back from conservationists, hunters, trappers, as well as CPW staff biologists, the commission voted to advance the fur ban.
The commission has since asked CPW to begin the rulemaking process, which starts with public comment.
Dan Gates, executive director for Coloradans for Responsible Wildlife Management, says the commissions actions seem to speak louder than their words.
“Based upon what the commission has already done and how they’ve reacted with complete disregard for the agency, and going against the recommendations from the agency’s director, it doesn’t really matter what anybody says,” Gates told Complete Colorado.
Colorado has faced similar efforts by activists in recent years including a 2024 ballot measure to ban mountain lion hunting, which failed, and an attempt at banning fur sales in Denver, also shot down by voters.
“They’re not going to get much public comment, those people have already spoken,” Gates said. “It’s one of those modern-day conundrums that you run into of social science and science butting heads and depending on who is the final decision maker, that’s what they’re going to take into consideration. Is it the facts and the data or is it people’s opinions and emotions?”
CPW is accepting public comment from April 7 – May 3 through an online form or sent directly to the commission.
The comments will be used to draft an issue paper on the proposed ban, which will be presented to the commission during meetings scheduled for July 16-17.

