A group shot of the seven Wyoming Game and Fish Commissioners.

The Commission serves as the policy-making board of the Wyoming Game & Fish Department.

 

It is responsible for the direction and supervision of the Director of the Wyoming Game and Fish Department. The Department provides an adequate and flexible system of control, propagation, management, and protection and regulation of all wildlife in Wyoming (W.S. 23-1-301-303, W.S. 23-1-401). The Governor appoints seven members for six-year terms with Senate confirmation. At most, five members shall be of the same party (W.S. 23-1-201).

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A screenshot of the live recording of the 2023 Gillette commission meeting

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Commission Meeting Information

January 16-17, 2024 - Cheyenne
March 12-13, 2024 - Pinedale
April 16-17, 2024 - Riverton
May 21-23, 2024 - Commissioner’s Retreat at Whiskey Mountain Conservation Camp
July 16-17, 2024 - Buffalo (Tour)
September 10-11, 2024 - Douglas (Landowners of the Year)
November 14-15, 2024 - Saratoga

All meetings, dates and locations are subject to change.

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A map of Wyoming titled "Commission Districts" with a key underneath. Commission District 1 includes Goshen, Laramie and Platte county. District 2 includes Albany, Carbon and Sweetwater. District 3 includes Lincoln, Sublette, Teton and Uinta. District 4 includes Campbell, Johnson and Sheridan. District 5 includes Big Horn, Hot Springs, Park and Washakie. District 6 includes Crook Niobrara and Weston. And finally, District 7 includes Converse, Fremont and Natrona county.

Meet the Game and Fish Commissioners

A portrait of Wyoming Game and Fish Commissioner Ralph Brokaw.
District 2
Ralph Brokaw
A portrait of Wyoming Game and Fish Commissioner Ralph Brokaw.
Ralph Brokaw
District 2

Ralph Brokaw describes serving on the Wyoming Game and Fish Commission as a dream come true. 

 

Appointed in March 2019, Brokaw represents District 2 for Albany, Carbon and Sweetwater counties. 

 

He is a fifth-generation rancher in Arlington west of Laramie. Brokaw knew about the Commission prior to his appointment because his father was previously one of two final candidates considered for a Commission appointment. Brokaw looked back on that and thought he would like to be part of the Commission one day. 

 

“My past experiences with the Wyoming Game and Fish Department were with my local game warden and regional office,” Brokaw said. “Being on the Commission, you see the work that is being done year-round and the magnitude of the job. We’re involved in a lot of stuff. It’s a huge machine. I had no idea the department was that big.”

 

Wildlife has always been a passion for Brokaw. During high school, he rode along with game wardens to learn about their work. As a senior in high school and a freshman in college, he worked for Game and Fish through UW’s Wyoming Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit. He studied wildlife management at the University of Wyoming for two-and-a-half years before he returned to the family ranch and never left. The Brokaw family worked closely with Game and Fish and UW on various wildlife and habitat studies at the ranch.

 

“I’ve always had good relationships with Game and Fish personnel,” Brokaw said. 

 

He hopes to bring his life experiences from the ranch to the Commission to help tackle future challenges, which include the ongoing development of Wyoming’s chronic wasting disease management plan, gaining state management of endangered species such as grizzly bears and the ever-changing fiscal demands so the department and Commission can continue to conserve wildlife and serve people.

 

Brokaw also wants to engage new hunters and anglers, especially kids.

 

 “Kids are so distracted these days and pulled in so many directions,” he said. “With mom and dad working so hard, I don’t see kids introduced to the outdoors like I was. Kid recruitment is huge.”

Brokaw’s term expires in March 2025.

Email: [email protected]

A portrait of Wyoming Game and Fish Commissioner Richard Ladwig.
President - District 6
Richard Ladwig
A portrait of Wyoming Game and Fish Commissioner Richard Ladwig.
Richard Ladwig
President - District 6

Public service and wildlife have been a big part of Richard Ladwig’s life. Given his life experiences, he seemed like a natural fit for the Wyoming Game and Fish Commission.

 

Appointed in 2019, Ladwig represents District 6, which is made up of Crook, Weston and Niobrara counties. 

 

Ladwig was previously a county commissioner in Niobrara County for 20 years. After he completed his last term as county commissioner, Ladwig was approached about serving on the Game and Fish Commission. 

 

“It is a learning process I don’t think will ever stop,” said Ladwig of serving on the Commission. “There’s always something going on. It is a way bigger job than I thought it was. I’ve been exposed to the Wyoming Game and Fish Department in more ways than I ever thought possible. When you look at the department as a whole, it’s a large operation. To be on the team that helps take care of that is a privilege and one that only seven people have.” 

 

In 1893, Ladwig’s great grandfather homesteaded and started a ranch north of Manville in Niobrara County where Ladwig spent a lot of time until the ranch was sold. Hunting and fishing have been a big part of his life. Ladwig said the ranch was the first to be enrolled in the Game and Fish’s Access Yes program in Niobrara County.

 

Ladwig served in the Air Force for 22 years, and during part of that time was stationed in Alaska. While there, he took on additional duties as a military wildlife agent. Some of his work included license checks, fish sampling, bird counts and water flow studies. He also took some wildlife management classes — all valuable experience for his term on the Commission. Ladwig said one of the most significant accomplishments of the Commission and Game and Fish during his time is the development of a chronic wasting disease management plan for Wyoming. 

 

“That plan is still ongoing and we don’t have all the answers, but we are on track to do some magnificent things for Wyoming if we keep going with it,” he said.

 

Ladwig knows the Commission and Game and Fish face several challenges in the future. Some of those on the table now include the management of elk feedgrounds and work on trapping regulations. Some challenges have yet to be discovered, but Ladwig said he and the Commission will be ready when they do. 

 

“I want to help keep Game and Fish going and keep things going for the public,” he said.

Ladwig’s term expires in March 2025.

 

Email: [email protected]

A portrait of Wyoming Game and Fish Commissioner Mark Jalovich.
Vice President - District 1
Mark Jolovich
A portrait of Wyoming Game and Fish Commissioner Mark Jalovich.
Mark Jolovich
Vice President - District 1

Mark Jolovich has long enjoyed the outdoors of Wyoming, making him a great fit for the Commission. 

 

He was appointed to the Commission in March 2021 and represents District 1, which encompasses Platte, Goshen and Laramie counties.  

 

Even with a lifetime of outdoor experience, Jolovich said he was bombarded with information when he started with the Commission.

 

“It’s like fighting a tsunami, but I’m loving every minute of it,” said Jolovich of the duties and responsibilities of serving on the Commission. 

 

Jolovich is a Wyoming native who lives in Torrington and has owned a water distribution company for nearly three decades with his wife, Becky.

 

“I’m working on retiring so I can help with Game and Fish projects,” he said with a wry smile. Jolovich was a long-time committee member of the 2Shot Goose Hunt in Torrington. It was there when a committee member from the 2Shot Goose Hunt first approached him about serving on the Commission. 

 

Jolovich has always been involved in the outdoors. He began working on his grandparents’ farm in the summers when he was a kid. It’s where he said he learned how to work. He hunted with his dad before he was old enough to go out on his own. Jolovich felt he had a good sense of what the Wyoming Game and Fish Department does, but he learned of the vastness of the work when appointed to the Commission.

 

“I want to do all I can and do right by the people of Wyoming and the Game and Fish Department,” Jolovich said. “Being in business for myself for 26 years and being very successful, I’ve learned to watch the bottom line and to treat people right. That’s the way I look at serving on the Commission.”

 

His term expires in March 2027. 

 

Email: [email protected]

A portrait of Wyoming Game and Fish Commissioner John Masterson.
District 7
John Masterson
A portrait of Wyoming Game and Fish Commissioner John Masterson.
John Masterson
District 7

[email protected] 

 

John Masterson is from Natrona County and graduated from the University of Wyoming College of Law and began his legal career working for the County and District Courts in Natrona County. He later transitioned into private practice and then became an Assistant District Attorney. Masterson moved on to become a lawyer in the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Wyoming.

In 2003, then-Governor David Freudenthal appointed him to serve as legal counsel and federal/state relations coordinator with the Governor’s Office. In his final months of service to the state, Masterson served as the deputy director of Wyoming’s Office of State Lands and Investments. He participated directly in policy making, oversight and administration of over 3.5 million acres of state surface lands and 4.2 million acres of minerals.

Masterson has been a longtime supporter of the Wyoming State Bar, serving on the Board of Law Examiners, the Board of Professional Responsibility, the Board of Officers and Commissioners, the Civil Pattern Jury Instructions Committee, the Legislative Developments Committee, the Editorial Committee for the Wyoming Lawyer and the Wyoming Lawyer Assistance Program Advisory Committee. He is also a past president of the Wyoming State Bar. Masterson was appointed to the Wyoming Game and Fish Commission in March of 2023 for District #7

A portrait of Wyoming Game and Fish Commissioner Kenneth Roberts.
District 3
Kenneth Roberts
A portrait of Wyoming Game and Fish Commissioner Kenneth Roberts.
Kenneth Roberts
District 3

Kenneth Roberts was thrilled when Gov. Mark Gordon asked him to serve on the Wyoming Game and Fish Commission. 

 

Roberts was named to the Commission in January 2021 to represent District 3, encompassing Teton, Sublette, Lincoln and Uinta counties.

 

“The Game and Fish Commission, to me, is the crown jewel of the State of Wyoming — bar none,” Roberts said. “You realize the magnitude of serving on the Commission really fast, then you realize how great of an organization it is and how everybody is so into it for the right reasons. It’s such a policy-driven board. You want to create good policy. You want to create good budgets. You want to make sure you’re serving the people of Wyoming.”

 

Roberts represents one of the most diverse districts when it comes to Wyoming’s outdoor spaces with challenges such as elk feedground management and the battle against invasive cheatgrass. Roberts said the vastness of Game and Fish and the responsibility of the Commission can be overwhelming, but he’s embraced it. “It’s an absolute honor. I hope I’m a good steward, and I hope I do my part to represent Wyoming,” he said

 

Roberts, who also serves as the Clerk of the 3rd Judicial District Court in Lincoln County, shares a passion for the outdoors like many Wyomingites. 

 

“I show up at the boat ramps with everybody. I show up on the streams with everybody. I drive up the country with everybody,” he said. “I want access and opportunity for everybody.”

 

Roberts also wants to see the older generation of outdoor enthusiasts get more involved in mentoring youth, such as with hunter education. He also feels the quality of employees across the Wyoming Game and Fish Department is high and wants to help ensure they stick around. “Having good policy is one thing, but you need the personnel to run it,” Roberts said. “I’d like to help maintain and keep our employees because they all are awesome and know exactly what’s going on. What can we do as a Commission to help that out?”

Roberts’ term expires in March 2027. 

 

Email: [email protected]

A portrait of Wyoming Game and Fish Commissioner Rusty Bell.
District 4
Rusty Bell
A portrait of Wyoming Game and Fish Commissioner Rusty Bell.
Rusty Bell
District 4

[email protected]

 

A Gillette, Wyoming born and raised entrepreneur, Rusty Bell turned his hobby of taxidermy into a business in 2008. Rusty’s Taxidermy provides full-service commercial and custom taxidermy for both foreign and domestic customers - and you never know what you might find in his shop! He attended the Second Nature School of Taxidermy, and is currently serving as the Treasurer of the Wyoming Association of Taxidermy Artists. Rusty and his wife Toni have been married 21 years and have two sons. Their family hobbies include hunting, fishing, bow fishing, traveling, and boy scouts.

 

A portrait of Wyoming Game and Fish Commissioner Ashlee Lundvall.
District 5
Ashlee Lundvall
A portrait of Wyoming Game and Fish Commissioner Ashlee Lundvall.
Ashlee Lundvall
District 5

The outdoors help people find themselves. Ashlee Lundvall knows that better than most. It’s why she returns to Wyoming’s open spaces time and time again – and the reason she advocates for under-represented groups to explore hunting, fishing and wildlife. 

 

Lundvall joined the Wyoming Game and Fish Commission in March 2021, representing District 5, which encompasses Big Horn, Hot Springs, Park and Washakie counties. 

 

Before her appointment to the Commission, Lundvall regularly looked for opportunities to work with conservation on a large scale, believing there is healing in the outdoors — something she wanted to share with others. Still, the appointment came as a surprise. 

 

“There are so many moving parts working for wildlife and habitat in Wyoming,” Lundvall said. “I constantly remind myself that I don’t have to have all of the answers because I can call on our amazing resources at the Wyoming Game and Fish Department and partnering organizations for information. It’s overwhelming at times, but I am thankful for the opportunity to do my part to serve.” 

 

She brought to the Commission a history of working with conservation groups that help get more people outside — including those with disabilities. Ensuring that access is important and personal. In the summer of 1999, a ranching accident left her with a broken back and permanently paralyzed. She said recreating in the outdoors helped her heal. Lundvall has advocated for women and equal access for all people to the outdoors for more than two decades in Wyoming. 

 

Lundvall said being a woman with a disability allows her to bring another perspective to the Commission. She hopes to bring something unique to the group during her time. Lundvall said that with many varying opinions across the state about wildlife and habitat management, it is important the Commission makes sure everyone feels heard and represented — even if the outcomes don’t make everyone happy. 

 

“Decisions aren’t always popular, but when you truly have Wyoming’s best interests at heart, you can feel good about the calls you have to make,” she said.

 

Lundvall’s term expires in March 2027.

 

Email: [email protected]

Commission Annual Reports

In these, the Wyoming Game and Fish Department Annual Reports, you will find summaries of division activities, individual program write-ups, participant expenditure information and other budget and financial data. It summarizes the efforts of the dedicated men and women of the Game and Fish Department and their efforts to conserve wildlife and serve people.