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Traveler's View: Federal Lands Poised To Suffer Under Next Interior Secretary

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“We will mine more, drill more, cut more timber.” — James Watt, Ronald Reagan’s first Interior secretary.

As we wait for the incoming Trump administration to identify its nominee for Interior secretary, we can't help but envision what the outcome could be. Among those said to be under consideration, or jockeying for the job, are retiring U.S. Rep. Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming, U.S. Rep. Rob Bishop of Utah, and Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin, all Republicans who favor energy exploration over conservation.

What shouldn’t go unnoticed is that Donald Trump could place the immediate future of hundreds of millions of acres of publicly owned lands — lands that all 321.4 million Americans have a vested interest in — into the hands of a politician who hasn’t shown they have the country’s best interests in mind when it comes to fracking regulations, public lands stewardship, or environmental protection.

  • Rep. Lummis has supported legislation that would give states control over fracking regulations on federal lands in their state; has opposed the Obama administration’s climate change program; signed legislation that opponents said “would prevent the EPA from protecting the world class fisheries of Bristol Bay, Alaska” from the proposed Pebble Mine; and voted along the lines of the League of Conservation Voters just 5 percent of the time during her eight years in the House.
  • Rep. Bishop has tried time and again to restrict the president’s use of the Antiquities Act to designate national monuments; helped found the Federal Land Action Group, FLAG, which works to transfer federal lands to states; declined requests that he denounce “Bundy-style thuggery and lawlessness on our nation’s public lands;” and been criticized for introducing legislation that opponents claim would weaken the Clean Air Act, the Federal Land Policy and Management Act, the National Forest Management Act, the National Environmental Policy Act, and the Wilderness Act.
  • Gov. Fallin has embraced pro-oil policies in Oklahoma; been criticized by the Sierra Club for having “been an absentee governor on all important environmental issues in our state during her term;” signed legislation that prohibited local governments in Oklahoma from banning hydrologic fracking; and in October led a day of prayer “to thank God for the blessings created by the oil and natural gas industry and to seek His wisdom and ask for protection.”

If you believe James Conca, a contributor to Forbes on energy and the environment, who on November 10 wrote that “energy in the new Administration will be just what the industry ordered,” you can further appreciate how any nominee Trump chooses for Interior will be bad for public lands management if you oppose energy exploration, want additional national monuments, and support federal land ownership.

And there has been much speculation over whether Mr. Trump could rescind monument designations bestowed on such places as Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument in Maine as well as Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in Utah.

The prospect of the next Interior secretary being a hard-line conservative who believes lands managed by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management or U.S. Forest Service should either be given to the states within which they exist or simply opened up to more energy exploration and logging is understandably concerning to those who appreciate public lands for recreation and habitat conservation and oppose rampant, loosely regulated fossil fuel energy production.

Then, too, there’s the economic return from preserving public lands. According to the Center for Western Priorities, one study indicates that 90 percent of America’s public lands already are open to oil and gas leasing, while just 10 percent are set aside for recreation, conservation, and other uses. Too, it's been demonstrated that counties with more protected lands, such as national monuments, perform better economically than counties without such protected areas. Additionally, surveys conducted by Colorado College conclude that majorities of voters in Western states believe public lands should remain under control of the federal government.

While the National Park System may not be directly impacted by energy development under the next administration, it very well could be adversely impacted by land management along its borders.

At the end of the day, we should question whether an Interior secretary who believes in aggressive energy exploration, reducing the size of public lands ownership, and weakening environmental regulations would be acting in the best interests of the entire U.S. population or simply in the interests of a fraction of that population and industry heads.

Comments

" I am looking forward to the change and hope for the best.+"

Gee, weren't HOPE and CHANGE bad words for the last eight years?

I just HOPE we get through the next four and don't expect much CHANGE.

I won't be surprised at all if the next NPS director comes from the upper management levels of Disneyland, Busch Gardens, or Universal Studios.


Well Rick, since I don't know who Darius Rubics is,  I doubt I cited him.  But then, you do like to hear what you want to hear so you can make your attacks.  


For those reader who are interested in learning about the long history of the National Park Service I recommend you visit npshistory.com for additional information. I have about 20,000 reports and documents on this site all pertaining to the National Park Service and parks. Reading these documents will put the discussion of the possible impact of the Trump Administration in historic context. Perhaps a Director from the private sector with experience would be a good thing for the service. As I have siad before the national parks have suffered from years of neglect and poor management by the current administration. I am looking forward to 2017 and change. 


Ah, but Esteemed Comrade, you did indeed cite Darius Rubics.

It just blows me away when I stop to think of how many of you folks are gullible enough to believe this kind of nonsense and fail to recognize it as Fake News.  It would be entertaining if it wasn't so pathetically alarming that it is partly due to "reporters" like Rubics that our political world has crashed into a dizzying twirl of tweets.  NBC News reported this morning that there are computer stock traders writing new computer codes that will allow them to react almost instantly to tweets from the Tweeter in Chief to buy or sell stocks based on what the Tweeter tweets to his tweetee fans and corporate or labor targets like Boeing or the Steel Workers Union.

Have a Tweetin' day, dear Comrade.

And on a happier note, I see that Great Smokies has reopened the west entrance through Gatlinburg and the Utah firefighters who were there have returned home safely.

This comment was edited to remove a link to a story wholly inappropriate for a family friendly site dedicated to national parks.-Ed. 

Sorry about that, Kurt.  Anyone interested in seeing the work of Darius Rubics may check out his website, newsexaminer.com 

 


Ok, folks, we've really strained the limits of the original post, so we're going to shut down the comments. 


One last one Kurt, I indeed linked to an article by Darius Rubics.  I got fooled with that particualrly "fake news" story.  But I am not fooled by the concept.  As wages are artificially forced up, automation will replace workers.  Its already happening.   Been to Yavapai Lodge recently?  In the resturant you place your own order at a computerized kiosk.  No order takers there.  

 


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