SVI-NEWS

Your Source For Local and Regional News

Slider

Slider

Featured News Wyoming

Facing staunch opposition, BLM extends Public Lands Rule deadline

Wyoming officials, other interests oppose rule they decry as bureaucratic meddling; conservationists call it solid strategy for tackling contemporary issues.

By Katie Klingsporn, WyoFile.com

In an apparent response to strident opposition from western conservatives, including Wyoming’s top elected officials, the Bureau of Land Management last week extended the public comment period for its new Public Lands Rule to July 5. 

Environmental advocates have described the measure, which would put conservation on equal footing with energy development, grazing and other approved uses of public lands, as a clear-eyed strategy for addressing contemporary problems like climate change and habitat loss.

The oil and gas industry, stock growers, and other deep-rooted western political and economic interests vehemently disagree. 

The U.S. House Committee on Natural Resources considered legislation Thursday that would require the BLM director to withdraw the rule that would elevate conservation as a “use” of public land. Gov. Mark Gordon traveled to Washington D.C. to testify before the committee, calling the proposed rule “unconstitutional” without congressional authorization.

“Simply put, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” Gordon testified. “The best solution is to rescind this rule.”

Bureau of Land Management Director Tracy Stone-Manning in Casper on May 22, 2022. (Katie Klingsporn/WyoFile)

During the hearing Gordon and U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman (R-Wyoming), along with other Republican lawmakers, bashed the rule as detrimental meddling from bureaucrats who are out of touch with rural western states. Wyoming is already a model of multiple-use that balances conservation, Gordon said, echoing a common theme. 

“I’m very concerned about the ulterior motives of this,” Gordon said. “It is to shut down fossil fuel development, and as I’ve mentioned, one of the things is that our fossil fuel industry is very much invested in conservation.”

Since it was unveiled April 3, the proposed rule has touched off a divide between pro-business, small-government groups who rankle at what they see as federal overreach and lack of transparency and those who believe conservation should be added to the agency’s multiple-use management toolkit to address issues like drought and climate change.

“We think that it has the potential to do a lot of good for conservation and specifically here in Wyoming,” said Meghan Riley, public lands and wildlife advocate for the Wyoming Outdoor Council. “We’re not immune to the effects of drought and increased wildfire and invasive weed species on public lands. And I think there are several provisions in the proposed rule that could help address some of the degradation on public lands.”

Equal footing

The BLM manages 245 million acres of public lands and 700 million acres of mineral estate according to the multiple use and sustained yield mandates given by Congress through the Federal Lands Policy and Management Act of 1976, or FLPMA. In Wyoming, the agency manages more than 17.5 million acres of public lands and 40.7 million acres of federal mineral estate. 

Those multiple uses include energy development, livestock grazing, recreation and timber harvesting, and BLM is tasked under FLPMA with managing them to protect scenic, environmental and ecological values. FLPMA also states that the BLM, “where appropriate, will preserve and protect certain public lands in their natural condition.”

The proposed rule would direct land managers to identify and prioritize lands and waters that require habitat restoration work through the land management process, according to the BLM. It also proposes conservation leasing be used to facilitate restoration work on public lands in cooperation with community partners, as well as more “consistent and clear direction” to ensure appropriate management of historic, cultural and scenic resources that includes prioritizing protection and designation of Areas of Critical Environmental Concern. 

The proposal responds to the growing need to better manage public lands, waters and wildlife in the face of devastating wildfires, historic droughts and severe storms, according to the BLM. 

“As pressure on our public lands continues to grow, the proposed Public Lands Rule provides a path for the BLM to better focus on the health of the landscape, ensuring that our decisions leave our public lands as good or better off than we found them,” BLM Director Tracy Stone-Manning said when the rule was announced. 

The rule would not impact valid existing uses of public lands such as already issued grazing or energy development leases, according to the BLM. But that assertion does not allay politicians like Gordon and Hageman, who say it would be injurious to ranchers and other important players in Wyoming’s economy. Wyoming lawmakers have expressed particular concern about the potential for conservation leases to be wielded as a way to shut down access for uses like grazing and mining. 

“The very lifestyle of rural communities is at risk when burdensome regulations like this cripple businesses that allow these communities to flourish,” Hageman testified at Thursday’s House committee hearing. 

Nada Wolff Culver, the BLM’s deputy director of policy and programs, said the proposed rule won’t affect the way the agency manages grazing under the Taylor Grazing Act. The proposal does not undermine any existing valid rights, impede development or require the use of conservation leasing, according to the BLM. 

“The idea with the conservation leases is it’s one way that an entity who’s carrying out permitted activity on public lands that results in an unavoidable impact to public lands could mitigate, could offset that,” Culver testified before the House committee. “It doesn’t require that every activity be offset, that generally happens on a case-by-case basis as with the rest of this rule.”

The conservation leases provide a way for the BLM to “leverage private investment towards restoration and mitigation efforts taking place on public lands, while working with partners, industry and the public to site energy development and to conserve greater sage grouse and wildlife habitat,” Culver testified.

U.S. Rep Jared Huffman (D-California) noted that western states are not in lockstep on this issue.

“Not every western state believes it would be the end of the world to elevate conservation to equal footing with grazing and timber harvesting and mining and other extractive uses,” Huffman said at the hearing. “A lot of folks think that this is just good, plain common sense and sensible policy.”

Ground-level opposition

Members of Wyoming’s Select Federal Natural Resource Management Committee voted unanimously to send a letter of opposition to the public lands rule at a meeting last week in Rock Springs. Their vote followed testimony from energy, stockgrower and county government representatives opposed to the proposed rule. 

Also testifying was Adam Stewart, legislative director for U.S. Sen. Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyoming).

Lummis “believes that this proposal is a radical departure from the law and flies in the face of five decades of public land management,” Stewart said. 

Lummis in May co-sponsored legislation introduced by Wyoming’s other senator, fellow Republican John Barrasso, that would, like the House version, block the proposed rule. 

Superintendent of Public Instruction Megan Degenfelder, who previously worked in the coal, oil and gas industries, also submitted a letter to the BLM opposing the draft conservation rule. The measure would threaten mineral development on adjacent state lands, and with it crucial revenues that Wyoming’s K-12 schools rely on, she said.

Pronghorn and drilling rigs on the Ultra Energy Field. (Tara Boucher/BLM/FlickrCC)

Supporters of the proposed rule say instead of blocking it outright, interested parties can use the process to refine and perfect a new framework that better fits all contemporary public land uses. 

“Instead of holding bombastic hearings to decry a work-in-progress, members of Congress should sit down with the authors of the proposed rule, understand how and why it’s written the way it is, and provide constructive feedback to help make it even better,” Aaron Weiss, deputy director for The Center for Western Priorities, said in a statement. 

His group supports it. “By elevating the best available science and giving land managers on the ground more flexibility, the rule would ensure America’s public lands remain healthy for years to come,” Weiss said. 

Riley with WOC said the organization is excited about several aspects of the proposal, including the expansion of land health standards to all lands the BLM manages, the potential of conservation leases to aid restoration and the inclusion of tribes in decision-making.

Riley is also happy the agency extended its comment deadline. “There’s a lot of BLM land in the state of Wyoming, and folks who live here should get the chance to let the agency know what they think about the content of the proposed rule.”

The agency had received more than 136,000 comments by Monday. 

Comments can be submitted at https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2023/04/03/2023-06310/conservation-and-landscape-health#open-comment or by clicking here.

Let us know what you think!
+1
0
+1
0
+1
0
+1
0
+1
0
+1
0
Share