While controversy continues to simmer over the Bureau of Land Managementâs draft plans for 3.6 million acres in the Rock Springs area, more restrictive measures seem to be taking hold on federal land all over the West, an off-highway vehicle enthusiast told Cowboy State Daily.
âIt seems like âdrip, drip, dripâ â they just chip away at little pieces of public land,â said Ken Draze. âIt seems like every time you turn around, theyâre trying to lock people out of public land.â
Moab Closures?
Draze and his wife, Trish, are retired and recently decided to settle in Pinedale, where theyâre building a house. They like to tour public lands across the West and Southwest in their side-by-side utility terrain vehicle, which he calls their âbuggy.â
But heâs worried that the BLM and other federal agencies are leaning toward more road and trail closures.
During a recent trip to vast and hugely popular BLM land in Utahâs Moab region, Draze said he was alarmed by proposals to close many of the roads and trails there.
âMoab had, by far, the cleanest trail system weâve ridden,â he said. âBut we were amazed to hear the BLM say that they were going to shut down a huge amount of trails there.â
Cowboy State Daily requesting comment from the BLMâs Moab field office werenât answered.

Rock Springs Worries
There have been a flurry of concerns expressed about the BLMâs draft Rock Springs Resource Management Plan (RMP). Many have said the agencyâs current favored Alternative B is far too restrictive on ranching, energy exploration and other uses.
Language suggesting that there might be some road closures in the Rock Springs region was initially in the draft, but BLM officials told members of the Wyoming Legislature that was an error and that it would be struck from the draft.
Another separate travel management plan dealing with roads and trails in the Rock Springs area will be handled separately to the RMP matter, BLM officials told legislators.
Meanwhile, at the urging of the state of Wyoming, the agency agreedThursday to extend the public comment period for the RMP, which had been scheduled to close on Nov. 16, until Jan. 17, 2024. Â
A Wider Pattern
While road and trail management might be off the table, at least for now, in the Rock Springs area, Draze said heâs seen closures proposed on BLM and National Forest lands not only in Moab, but elsewhere in Utah, Idaho and other states.
He also said heâs seen a push toward restrictions on âdispersedâ RV camping. Meaning, the BLM and U.S. Forest Service seem to be increasingly discouraging people from setting up campsites wherever they please and instead pushing them into campgrounds.
âNow theyâre starting to shut that dispersed RV camping down and trying to force people into designated areas, where youâre stacked on top of each other,â Draze said.
âPublic Land Ownerâ
Draze said he understands the increasing challenges that federal land agencies face as more and more people take to the outdoors.
There is legitimate concern about litterbugs and others who abuse the land, as well as tension between different user groups, he said.
However, he thinks the BLM and other agencies are taking the wrong approach by pushing toward more restrictions and road closures.
As a retired law enforcement officer, he said a better approach would be to punish the bad actors.
âIf youâre leaving your campsite all messy with garbage and youâre not being a good steward of the public land, then that should be a law enforcement matter,â he said. âYou have to go after the people who are committing the offenses. You canât just say, âWell, everybodyâs badâ and shut things down.â
And while different public land user groups might not always see eye-to-eye, they should stand together, he added.
âAs buggy riders, as mountain bikers, as RV campers â if we donât vote to support use of our public lands, respectfully, then theyâll pick us out one by one,â Draze said. âIâm a public landowner, and I take that seriously.âÂ
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.





