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Indefinitely Wild

The BLM鈥檚 Slow Return to Normalcy

And what it means for the future of America鈥檚 public lands

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On September 30, 2021, the Senate approved Tracy Stone-Manning by a 50-45 vote. Stone-Manning is the first official director of the BLM in five years.

On September 20, Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland announced plans to relocate the Bureau of Land Management headquarters from Grand Junction, Colorado, back to Washington, D.C.. The move marks an ongoing attempt to restore the agency鈥檚 ability to effectively manage 245 million acres of public land, after concerted efforts by the Trump administration to destroy its institutional knowledge, remove public oversight, and illegally twist the agency into the service of the oil and gas industries.

鈥淭he Bureau of Land Management is critical to the nation鈥檚 efforts to address the climate crisis, expand public access to our public lands, and preserve our nation鈥檚 shared outdoor heritage. It is imperative that the bureau have the appropriate structure and resources to serve the American public,鈥 said Secretary Haaland . 鈥淭here鈥檚 no doubt that the BLM should have a leadership presence in Washington, D.C.鈥攍ike all the other land management agencies鈥攖o ensure that it has access to the policy-, budget-, and decision-making levers to best carry out its mission. In addition, the BLM鈥檚 robust presence in Colorado and across the West will continue to grow.鈥

BLM headquarters was relocated to Grand Junction in 2019, in a move the Trump administration claimed would bring its executive staff closer to the vast swaths of western lands the agency manages. Since of the BLM鈥檚 10,000 employees were already based in the West鈥攊n the same locations as the areas they manage鈥攃ritics argued this was, instead, . It didn鈥檛 help that the new office in Colorado was shared with oil and gas firms. Instead of locating senior staff adjacent to the lawmakers who decide their budgets and provide oversight, the new office instead housed those staff in the same building as the industries they鈥檙e tasked with regulating.

Of the 328 BLM positions that were relocated out of Washington, D.C., . Only three staff members ultimately relocated to Grand Junction. Today, the BLM remains, 鈥,鈥 according to an agency employee who spoke with E&E News. As of the time of writing, the BLM is actively hiring for .

鈥淭he past several years have been incredibly disruptive to the organization, to our public servants, and to their families,鈥 Secretary Haaland said at Monday鈥檚 staff meeting. 鈥淎s we move forward, my priority is to revitalize and rebuild the BLM so that it can meet the pressing challenges of our time, and to look out for our employees鈥 well-being.鈥

One major obstacle to Haaland鈥檚 goal: like the National Park Service, the BLM has been without a Senate-confirmed director since the Obama administration. President Biden鈥檚 nominee for the role, Tracy Stone-Manning, spent much of the summer facing confirmation hearings in the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, where Republican senators attempted to brand her as an 鈥.鈥 Her nomination was voted out of committee right before the chamber鈥檚 summer recess, and is now on the Senate鈥檚 to-do list for the fall.

Republican objections to Stone-Manning stem from in an incident in 1989, when she helped a college friend written on behalf of anti-logging protesters, warning of metal spikes the protestors had allegedly hammered into trees in Idaho. She later testified in court, providing evidence that led to the conviction of two of the protestors. Stone-Manning has since built a respected career around public lands management and politics, working for Senator Jon Tester, running the Montana Department of Environmental Quality, handling conservation policy for the National Wildlife Federation, and serving as former Montana Governor Steve Bullock鈥檚 chief of staff.

Republican objections to Stone-Manning鈥檚 nomination鈥攍ed by Wyoming Senator and Montana Senator 鈥攁re notable, because those same senators supported the nomination of William Perry Pendley to the BLM director position. Pendley鈥檚 stated goal was to sell off public lands, and he authored numerous racist, homophobic, anti-immigrant, anti鈥揘ative American, and anti-science screeds. His nomination ended up proving so controversial that the Trump administration eventually withdrew it. Pendley鈥檚 status running the agency as its deputy director was then ruled illegal by a federal judge, opening up all policies and decisions enacted during his tenure to legal challenges.

While Stone-Manning鈥檚 confirmation process drags on, the BLM is currently being run by the new deputy director of policy and programs, . Upon taking office in February, one of her first orders was to across a range of policies enacted by her predecessor that could have opened up 28 million acres of public land to oil and gas exploitation. The moratorium allows time for courts to rule against those decisions, or for the agency to enact new policies protecting those areas.

Like Biden鈥檚 nominee for NPS director, any future director of the BLM will not only face a challenging confirmation process, and not just be inheriting an agency de-staffed and demoralized by the Trump administration; they鈥檒l also be tasked with the unprecedented challenge of coordinating a significant share of our country鈥檚 attempts to prepare for鈥攐r possibly try to prevent鈥攖he worst effects of climate change.

What institutional knowledge is left at the agency will be critical to realizing those goals. Along with the headquarters re-re-location, Secretary Haaland also announced Monday plans to create a new 鈥渨estern hub鈥 in the existing Grand Junction office, as well as an employee-led steering committee. She says that committee will, 鈥渞epresent all parts of the BLM,鈥 as it makes new hires and reorganizes a new staff. In the meantime, the Colorado office will be tasked with managing the agency鈥檚 conservation, recreation, renewable energy, and tribal coordination programs.

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