WASHINGTON, D.C. â The Interior Department announced Wednesday it intends to get rid of a 2024 Bureau of Land Management conservation rule, a move welcomed by Wyomingâs congressional delegation and condemned by environmentalists.
The regulation is officially called the Conservation and Landscape Health Rule but is better known as the Public Lands Rule. In the wake of Interior Secretary Doug Burgumâs announcement, the next step is a 60-day comment period on the proposed repeal.
Wyomingâs D.C. delegation of three Republicans issued a joint statement Wednesday characterizing the rule as yet another example of government overreach that fails to reflect the interests of rural westerners and the region's backbone industries such as energy and livestock.
âThe Biden administration's Public Lands Rule was a direct hit to the West, threatening to shut down hundreds of thousands of acres of working land and hurt the livelihoods of hardworking Wyoming families who've depended on these lands for generations,â U.S. Sen. Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming said in the statement.
âLeft Idleâ
Lummisâ estimate of âhundreds of thousands of acresâ at stake is consistent with Burgumâs interpretation. Burgum said the rule stood to âblock accessâ on such acreage from âenergy and mineral production, timber management, grazing and recreation across the West.â
âThe previous administration had treated conservation as âno use,â meaning the land was to be left idle rather than authorizing legitimate uses of the land like grazing, energy development or recreation,â Burgum said.
The 42-page rule does not actually use the term âno use,â but Burgum is one of many who interpreted it that way, citing its sweeping scope involving micromanagement of ecosystems.
Among recreational, agricultural and industrial users alike, Burgum noted, there was âdeep concern that the rule created regulatory uncertainty, reduced access to lands, and undermined the long-standing multiple-use mandate of the BLM as established by Congress.â
Hageman, Barrasso
U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman of Wyoming said in the joint statement that the proposed repeal would restore âcommon sense by returning management of the lands to the people who depend on them.â
âThis is a huge win for Wyoming, securing grazing rights, bolstering energy production, and protecting rural economies from overreaching, absurd mandates,â said Hageman, who serves on the House Natural Resources Committee.
Added Sen. John Barrasso, U.S. Senate Majority Whip of Wyoming, a member of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee: âThe Biden Public Lands Rule was a direct attack on our way of life. The Trump administration is right to rescind this outrageous rule.â
Environmentalistsâ Concerns
Environmental groups were quick to criticize Burgumâs move, calling it another step toward âgiveawaysâ to energy industries.
âThe rule was created to address a historic imbalance that leaves 80% of BLM land open to oil and gas development and vast areas open to mining, often at the expense of public access and conservation uses,â the National Parks Conservation Association said in a statement Wednesday.
âThis rule protects park-adjacent landscapes from unchecked industrial energy development, and without it, parks like Grand Teton, Sequoia and Kings Canyon, and Dinosaur National Monument could see oil rigs on their horizons or mines polluting the rivers that sustain them,â the statement said.
âOur public lands need balance, not more giveaways,â it said.
The Natural Resources Defense Council said in a Wednesday statement that the rule âstrengthens tools to address climate change, safeguard wildlife habitat and watersheds, incorporate Indigenous knowledge, and manage lands sustainably for future generations.â
Lummisâs Birthday
Burgumâs announcement happened to coincide with Lummisâs 71st birthday. The Senate Western Caucus, an informal yet influential group she chairs, took to the platform X to wish her all the best.
For Lummis, Burgumâs announcement was business as usual on matters involving the western caucus and the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee on which she serves.
Through legislation and administrative actions, Republicans in D.C. have upended the Biden administrationâs energy and environmental agenda on multiple fronts. Burgumâs announcement Wednesday was just the latest salvo.
âLeftist Washington bureaucrats have worked overtime to lock up federal lands, block our energy production, hurt our timber industry, take away grazing rights, and shut out the ranchers, loggers, and energy workers who actually live in these communities and know how to take care of the land,â Lummis said in Wednesdayâs joint statement with the delegation.
Sean Barry can be reached at sean@cowboystatedaily.com.