As the epicenter of controversy over the Bureau of Land Managementâs proposed plan for 3.6 million acres of public land in the Rock Springs area, Sweetwater County could set a precedent for how things go across Wyoming and the region.
âIf itâs ours first, then what happens in Sweetwater County is precedent, and it can go from there and spread from there,â County Commissioner Taylor Jones told Cowboy State Daily about how the county responds to the BLMâs preferred plan, which favors conservation over other popular public uses.
The Sweetwater County Commission has sent letters to the BLM asking that the agencyâs favored version of the Resource Management Plan (RMP), Alternative B, be dismissed. Or, at least that the public comment period for the RMP, now set to end Nov. 16, be extended.
Commissioners donât hold much hope that either of those things will happen.
âEverything feels rushed. Thereâs a lot of uncertainly to it. Itâs been kind of all over the place, to be honest,â said Commissioner Keaton West.
1.8 Million Acres In Question
The BLM manages a huge swath of land from the Rock Springs office, the bulk of it in Sweetwater Couty. Alternative B designates 1.8 million acres, or about half, as âareas of critical environmental concernâ (ACES).
An update of the Rock Springs RMP has been in the works for years, and the BLM has outlined four alternatives.
Alternative A proposes leaving things as they are. Alternative B â the controversial plan favored by the BLM and Biden administration â leans heavily toward conservation and preservation. Alternative C skews the other way, toward as much energy development and other heavy uses as possible.
Alternative D would strike a balance between the extremes. It involves the most input from Sweetwater County and other cooperators, Commissioner Island Richards said. It would probably be much more favorable from the countyâs perspective.

Sheriff Said He Wonât Cooperate
Sweetwater County Sheriff John Grossnickle recently told members of the Wyoming Legislature that if the RMP passes Alternative B, he wonât cooperate with BLM law enforcement in enforcing it.
Itâs a similar tact many local-level law enforcement agencies took with enforcing public health orders during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Richards said county commission wonât direct Grossnickle one way or the other, and trusts him to make his own decisions for his department.
âHeâs elected to do his job, to do law enforcement how he thinks it needs to be done,â Richards said.
Jones agreed that itâs not the commissionâs place to manage the sheriff, adding that he personally supports Grossnickleâs stance.
âI support him 100%,â Jones said. âI think itâs great that he would take that stance. If I understand it correctly, the sheriffâs office would not support the BLM is enforcing those rules. And if the BLM were to arrest somebody and take them to the Sweetwater County Jail, they would be turned away.â
Calls to the sheriffâs office for comment werenât returned by Tuesday evening.
Some legislators also have called for draft bills urging Gov. Mark Gordonâs office to not cooperate with the BLM, creating a new position in the governorâs office to protect the stateâs interest and possibly try to convince BLM employees to come work for the state instead.
Richards says he likes the idea of the new position in the governorâs office.
âI think that concept is great, to have somebody at the state level who can coordinate all of that, because this is not just a county issue,â he said.
Lots Of Support
Richards, Jones and West said theyâve been heartened by the support theyâve gotten from other Wyoming counties.
Thereâs been ânear unanimous, if not unanimousâ support from every other Wyoming county stating that Alternative B isnât a good choice, Richards said.
The Sweetwater County Republican Party also has offered training sessions for the public on how to submit âsubstantiveâ comments that the BLM will take into account, he said. Thatâs important, because public comments could âmove the needleâ toward the BLM backing away from Alternative B.
The draft proposal, maps and other information is available online, as is a guide for filing comments.
Frustration
He and the other commissioners said theyâre frustrated because, from their perspective, the BLM hasnât really listened to Sweetwater County or other cooperators, including the agencyâs own employees, in considering Alternative D.
âIt doesnât make sense that weâve had 12 years of cooperatorâs input, and they threw that all out the window and with that that alternative (B). Itâs unprecedented, and itâs not the way you treat people who are supposedly your cooperating partners,â Richards said.
He added that the commission doesnât blame BLM employees in the Rock Springs office for decisions that were made above their heads.
âI have to give some of the local employees of the BLM credit,â he said. âThey have been really helpful in teaching us what a âsubstantiveâ comment is, and how to do it.â
What About Those Roads?
When the initial draft of the RMP was released, it included a passage indicating that the number of roads and trails in the Rock Springs area might be cut down to 2,500 miles.
BLM officials recently told legislators that passage was left in the RMP draft in error. A âtravel management planâ for the Rock Springs area will be handled as a completely separate matter.
Jones said thereâs still some concern over roads and trails in Sweetwater County, however. Off-highway vehicle recreation is a huge part of the countyâs tourism economy. And the RMP as it is already could strike huge blows to the countyâs energy sector, possibly costing as many as 3,000 jobs.
There also seems to be some discrepancy over just how many miles of roads and trails there are in Sweetwater County, Jones added.
The BLM estimates about 16,000 miles, but according to the countyâs mapping there are roughly 33,000 miles of passable roads and trails.
As the comment period nears its end, the commission continues to worry about how the RMP could affect the county, West said.
âWe have a large, large concern and we want to protect what we all appreciate in Sweetwater County. Itâs why weâre here. Itâs what keeps our economy booming,â he said.
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.





