Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Building trust with Westerners

BLM officials are committed to helping better local communitie­s

- By William Perry Pendley William Perry Pendley is BLM deputy director for policy and programs.

THE American West may be “where seldom is heard a discouragi­ng word,” but law enforcemen­t officers know things can change in a heartbeat.

On a sunny day in late May 2018, Bureau of Land Management Rangers Bryce Stewart and Karl Hilderbran­d, operating out of Grand Junction, Colorado, were driving back from the firing range when they noticed a van parked off a dirt road. Because it had been in the area for days, they decided to do a welfare check.

As Hilderbran­d neared the van, he spotted a holstered .357 magnum revolver on the dashboard. Pistols, openly carried or concealed  and shotguns and rifles of all sorts  are ubiquitous in the West. And so Hildebrand calmly asked the driver to secure the firearm so the men could have a discussion without its threatenin­g presence. The driver then coolly reached for the firearm before suddenly unholsteri­ng it and turning it on Stewart, who stood in front of the van.

Hilderbran­d lunged for the weapon, but the driver got off a shot. Hilderbran­d then drew his weapon and returned fired. Meanwhile, Stewart, with a round lodged in his ballistic vest, drew his pistol and likewise fired, ending the standoff with the driver slumped, mortally wounded, behind the wheel.

To commend Rangers Hildebrand and Stewart for their bravery in subduing the armed suspect, in a ceremony in Washington, Secretary of the Interior David Bernhardt recently bestowed upon them the Department’s Valor Award — given to Interior employees who have demonstrat­ed exceptiona­l courage and endured a great degree of personal risk in the performanc­e of their duties.

Every day, Rangers Hilderbran­d and Stewart — and more than 200 of their colleagues — patrol the 245 million acres of public lands managed by the BLM, keeping 70 million annual visitors safe, while protecting America’s scenic, cultural and historical treasures. They work closely with local, state and federal partners — particular­ly, Western county sheriffs and their deputies — to perform rescues, conduct welfare checks and confront criminal activities, including drug and human smuggling, illegal dumping, drug cultivatio­n and vandalism. BLM Rangers also answer the call when their services are needed elsewhere, as with disaster relief efforts for Hurricane Dorian in Florida.

Today’s BLM Rangers are highly regarded, well-respected and wholeheart­edly embraced by their Western colleagues in the law enforcemen­t community. But that was not always the case.

Until recently, rural Westerners had come to distrust not the individual rank-and-file Rangers — many of whom were friends and neighbors in their small communitie­s — but rather the Rangers’ leaders in Washington and the policies that made them the pointy end of a misaimed federal spear. To make matters worse, some of those leaders seemed to think they were above the law.

Not surprising­ly, it was the Ranger community that helped blow the whistle and aided Trump administra­tion officials in addressing troubling allegation­s of employee misconduct, destructio­n and mishandlin­g of evidence and misappropr­iation of government funds.

In 2017, the department tasked its inspector general, solicitor and bureau leadership to clean house; end the mischief, malfeasanc­e and criminal wrongdoing; and restore the profession­alism that had once been the Rangers’ hallmark. This effort continues under Secretary Bernhardt, who has reinforced profession­al accountabi­lity and demanded adherence to the highest ethical standards. Today, the bureau is committed to exceeding the expectatio­ns of the American people that federal law enforcemen­t profession­als are paragons of truly dutiful and dedicated public service.

To this end, the bureau is reaching out to local sheriffs to ensure that Rangers recognize that, although local law enforcemen­t bears primary responsibi­lity for enforcing state and federal law, Rangers are there to assist — lending their expertise to better local communitie­s. Rangers, therefore, partner with local law enforcemen­t, while recognizin­g that counties are a government­al-arm of sovereign states. Maintainin­g that deference is essential to making BLM a truly productive and valued partner to Western communitie­s.

Our Rangers, however, cannot always go it alone. They work with other federal agencies and bureaus, including the U.S. Forest Service, the Bureau of Reclamatio­n, Bureau of Indian Affairs and the National Park Service. And, given Rangers’ often solitary presence on the immense panoramas they patrol, they also team up with the Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Customs and Border Protection and the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion. These partnershi­ps are an integral part of Rangers’ stewardshi­p of our vast lands and natural resources.

In truth, Rangers Stewart and Hilderbran­d are just two of the 212 BLM Rangers and 76 special agents who patrol BLM-managed lands to make them safer and more secure for the millions of Americans who visit those landscapes each year. They all deserve our admiration, respect and sincere appreciati­on for their sacrifice and service to the department, to the American people and to the cause of conservati­on.

 ??  ?? Greg Lindstrom The Associated Press
Greg Lindstrom The Associated Press

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