Lodi News-Sentinel

U.S. overhauls public land use planning; senator vows reversal

- By Matthew Brown

BILLINGS, Mont. — U.S. government officials on Thursday finalized an overhaul of how they plan for oil and gas drilling, mining, grazing and other activities across public lands in the West.

The move by the Bureau of Land Management aims to address longstandi­ng criticism of an often-cumbersome process that dictates developmen­t across almost 250 million acres of federal lands, primarily in 12 Western states and the Dakotas.

Administra­tion officials said the changes would improve public involvemen­t and government transparen­cy by adding additional steps to land-use planning.

Members of Congress, industry groups and local officials have raised concerns about the overhaul’s practical effects. They’ve said it will elevate wildlife and environmen­tal preservati­on above other uses such as energy developmen­t and shift decision-making from agency field offices to Washington, D.C.

It updates adopted in 1979.

The Associated Press obtained details prior to Thursday’s public announceme­nt.

The timing of the new rule in the Obama administra­tion’s last days drew a rebuke from U.S. Sen. John Barrasso, who predicted it would take authority away from local land managers. The Wyoming Republican pledged to work to reverse the action once President-elect Donald Trump takes office.

About 28 percent of Wyoming’s land and 65 percent of the minerals beneath its surface are administer­ed by the Bureau of Land Management.

“We need better coordinati­on among state, local and federal land management agencies. Massive landscapes­cale plans directed from Washington, D.C., are not the answer,” said Barrasso, chairman of the Senate Subcommitt­ee on Public Lands, Forests and Mining. regulation­s

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