The Denver Post

Pendley says he’s still on the job as acting director of BLM

- By Camille Erickson

» William Perry Pendley wants Wyoming to know that he’s still on the job as the nation’s acting head of public lands.

“I have not been ousted. That is not true,” Pendley, the Bureau of Land Management’s deputy director of policy and programs, said during an interview with the Star- Tribune on Thursday.

Pendley’s choice to defend his role managing 245 million acres of the nation’s surface land comes just weeks after a federal court in Montana declared Pendley had “served unlawfully as the acting BLM director for 424 days.” The decision effectivel­y enjoined him from acting in a director capacity, according to court documents.

Secretary of the Interior Department David Bernhardt had issued and renewed orders to give Pendley the authority to act as the agency’s leader. Pendley called the orders allowing him to serve as an acting director “perfectly legal.”

But according to District Judge Brian Morris’ Sept. 25 decision, the Trump administra­tion failed to follow the statutory requiremen­ts of the Federal Vacancies Reform Act when allowing Pendley to remain in his post as a temporary appointee for 15 months. What’s more, the administra­tion failed to garner an official confirmati­on vote from Congress on the appointmen­t as the leader of the bureau, as required by law.

Pendley said he firmly disagreed with the court’s decision and has continued to fulfill his duties as assigned.

“We are going to recognize that authority of the court and will obey it,” he said, adding, “now the Secretary ( Bernhardt) is signing all of our ( BLM) documents.”

The Trump administra­tion has vowed to appeal the decision, the Casper Star- Tribune reports.

“I see this for what it is. It’s not about me,” Pendley added. “This is just an attempt by the governor, who sued us, to derail what the Trump administra­tion has done.”

This summer, President Donald Trump announced his intent to nominate Pendley formally but never followed through. When asked if a nomination process would happen in the near future to appoint him officially as the BLM’s director, Pendley said, “I don’t know; that’s out of my control.”

For Wyoming, the BLM’s top dog can have huge influence over the state. Of Wyoming’s more than 60 million surface acres, almost half is considered federal land. The state also produces more minerals from public land than almost any other state, contributi­ng 38% of the natural gas produced on federal land nationwide, along with 16% of oil production.

The former oil and gas attorney has deep roots in Wyoming and several conflicts of interest, which significan­tly limited what Pendley could speak about during his interview with the Star- Tribune.

Pendley has been a vocal supporter of Trump’s America- First Energy Strategy, often relaxing regulation­s for oil and gas producers to cut back on duplicativ­e reporting mandates and spur domestic energy developmen­t. Pendley said his goal is to advance Trump’s agenda of “building the economy, providing for jobs, increasing recreation­al opportunit­ies and just being a better neighbor as a land management agency.”

In addition to institutin­g several rule changes to ease the regulatory burdens on energy companies, the BLM under Pendley also has helped bring about the Great American Outdoors Act, moved the BLM’s headquarte­rs to Colorado and prepared firefighte­rs to battle fires during COVID- 19.

But several conservati­on groups in Wyoming have long protested what they call the unconstitu­tional appointmen­t of Pendley to lead the BLM in any capacity. Many have alleged he opened up too much federal land to energy developmen­t, rolled back environmen­tal protection­s to serve private interests at the expense of the climate and negated the bureau’s multipleus­e mandate.

In the most recent wrinkle in the case against Pendley, Montana Gov. Steve Bullock struck again by requesting a court block three resource management plans approved by Pendley, which among other changes, made available sweeping swaths of public land for oil and gas developmen­t.

On Monday, conservati­on groups, including Western Environmen­tal Law Center, Western Watersheds Project, Center for Biological Diversity and WildEarth Guardians filed a brief providing the court with examples of actions taken under Pendley. The groups listed amendments for a resource management plan amendment to make way for the Moneta Divide oil and gas project in Wyoming as an example, according to court documents reviewed by the Star- Tribune.

 ?? Cayla Nimmo, The Casper Star- Tribune ?? William Perry Pendley, BLM deputy director for policy and programs says he’s still on the job as leader of the agency even though a federal court in Montana recently declared he has been serving unlawfully as acting director for more than a year.
Cayla Nimmo, The Casper Star- Tribune William Perry Pendley, BLM deputy director for policy and programs says he’s still on the job as leader of the agency even though a federal court in Montana recently declared he has been serving unlawfully as acting director for more than a year.

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