I've known about CWD since the early 1990's, mainly because I hunted Colorado and always had in interest in wildlife disease (almost a major in college). CWD was the worst thing to find east of the Mississippi.
All indications are still that CWD can wipe out a deer population. This isn’t a normal disease, the body has no defenses, in fact the body doesn’t even know it’s infected. Stanley Prusiner won the Nobel Prize for medicine by proving that a non-living protein (prion) can cause an infection. This was a huge discovery that no one thought possible. No normal disease is 100% fatal, but this one is.
It may not be transmittable to humans, but it will have an impact on hunting. We know a lot more on how it affects white-tailed deer (the most susceptible of all the deer species) since it was found in WI because of the increased research. We now know that it is spread orally, which includes baiting and feeding.
It can reduce deer densities to the point hunting is no longer needed, or even permissible. But it’s a slow disease, and this may take 30+ years or more. Western states are just starting to see this happen.
Bucks have a higher prevalence rate than does, since they are exposed to more urine during the rut. What this means is that even if it doesn't wipe out a population, it will take out bucks before they reach prime trophy age. How ironic is that for QDM? And the rate is related to deer densities. One game farm in WI that was depopulated (outside the CWD zone, so it came to the farm by moving deer) had a 75% infection rate (might have been higher as this is from memory). I think wild mule deer on the front range are approaching 45% infection rates a few years ago.
To deny that it’s not a problem for hunting is just short sighted, and total contrary to the research . What gets me are these game farm addicts like Allen Warren who say we have to stick together to protect the future of hunting. IMO we need to ban game farms to do just that.