Las Vegas Review-Journal

BLM relocation

Plan to move agency HQ a good idea

- Michael Winne Henderson Nicholas P. Gartner Las Vegas

The Bureau of Land Management employs more than 11,500 workers and is charged with managing nearly 250 million acres of public land — more than 12 percent of the country. The vast majority of that property sits in a dozen Western states, including Nevada, where the government controls 85 percent of the landmass, more than in any other state.

So why are the great majority of BLM officials housed in a headquarte­rs less than a mile from the Potomac in Washington, D.C., thousands of miles from the action?

That’s a question Congress and the Trump administra­tion may soon ponder, as two recent bills propose moving the BLM’S headquarte­rs out of the nation’s capital and into the heart of the American West at a yet-to-be-determined location. The proposals dovetail nicely with recent comments from Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, who has embraced such a move.

“You’re dealing with an agency that basically has no business in Washington, D.C.,” said Sen. Cory Booker, R-colo., who has sponsored a measure in the upper chamber to house the BLM in any one of 12 Western states, including Nevada. Republican congressma­n Scott Tipton of Colorado has offered similar legislatio­n in the House and has three Democratic co-sponsors, The Associated Press reported this week.

The move is long overdue. Tensions between rural Westerners and federal land managers have waxed and waned for decades, with the Cliven Bundy controvers­y being their latest incarnatio­n. The roots of these conflicts are many and varied, but the fact that many Westerners who live and work on or near public lands view the far-removed federal bureaucrac­y as arrogant and detached from the region’s realities is obviously a contributi­ng factor.

Bringing more agency officials to the region they manage would go a long way toward fostering a mutual respect and better understand­ing among ranchers, conservati­onists and federal land managers alike.

Mr. Zinke told the Review-journal in December that his mission was to “work with local communitie­s and to be better neighbors.” Getting his BLM management team out in the field would help.

In the meantime, this should be one idea on which members of Nevada’s congressio­nal delegation can come together. In the House, Democratic Reps. Dina Titus, Ruben Kihuen and Jacky Rosen, along with GOP Rep. Mark Amodei, should sign on to Rep. Tipton’s bill. Sen. Dean Heller, a Republican, and Catherine Cortez Masto, a Democrat, should do the same with Sen. Booker’s proposal.

In addition, all of them should aggressive­ly make the case that Nevada, with the highest percentage of federal land in the nation, would be an obvious location for any new BLM headquarte­rs.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

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