The Oklahoman

Trump to withdraw Pendley's nomination as public lands chief

- By Gene Johnson The Associated Press

SEATTLE—President Donald Trump intends to withdraw the nomination of William Perry Pendley to head the Bureau of Land Management, a senior administra­tion official said Saturday—much to the relief of environmen­talists who insisted the longtime advocate of selling federal lands should not be overseeing them.

Pen dley, a former oil industry and property rights attorney from Wyoming, has been leading the agency for more than a year under a series of temporary orders from Interior Secretary David Bernhardt. Democrats alleged the temporary orders were an attempt to skirt the nomination process, and Montana Gov. Steve Bullock and conservati­on groups have filed lawsuits to have Pen dley removed from office.

Trump announced Pendley's nomination to become the bureau's director in June. A senior administra­tion official, speaking on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter, confirmed Saturday that the president intended to withdraw that nomination.

“Good !” Bullock, a Democrat, tweeted Saturday.

“William Perry Pen dley wants to sell off our public lands – and has no business being in charge of them.”

The bureau oversees nearly a quarter-billion public acres in the U.S. West and much of the nation's onshore oil and gas developmen­t.

The White House did not offer an explanatio­n for the decision, which is not expected to become official until the Senate returns to session. The Interior Department said in a statement that the president makes staffing decisions and that Pendley continues leading the agency as deputy director for programs and policy.

Pen dley, whoi na 2017 essay argued that the “Founding Fathers intended all lands owned by the federal government to be sold,” spent three decades as president of the nonprofit Mountain States Legal Foundation, which has worked on behalf of ranchers, oil and gas drillers, miners and others seeking to use public lands for commercial gain.

Among the cases Pendley worked on was one challengin­g grizzly bear protection­s on national forest land. In another, he sought to validate an energy developer's claim to drill for oil on land considered sacred by t he Blackfeet Indian Tribe near

Glacier National Park in Montana. A federal appeals court rejected the effort two months ago.

The author of books that include “War on the West: Government Tyranny on America's Great Frontier,” he has criticized environmen­talists as extremists and expressed support for Nevada ranch er C liven Bundy, whose family has engaged in armed standoffs with federal agents.

In his announceme­nt of the nomination, Trump said Pendley had “worked to increase recreation­al opportunit­ies on and access to our Nation's public lands, height en concern for the impact of wild horses and burro son public lands, and increase awareness of the Bureau's multiple-use mission.”

The Interior Department has disputed the notion that Pendley wants to sell off federal lands, saying the Bureau of Land Management has acquired 25,000 acres under his leadership.

In his position at the agency, Pendley has overseen the relocation of most of the bureau's j obs from Washington to various locations in the West, including its new headquarte­rs in Grand Junction, Colorado — a move conservati­onists consider an effort to weaken the agency.

 ??  ?? In this Oct. 11 photo, U.S. Bureau of Land Management Acting Director William “Perry” Pendley speaks at a conference for journalist­s in Fort Collins, Colo. [MATTHEW BROWN/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO]
In this Oct. 11 photo, U.S. Bureau of Land Management Acting Director William “Perry” Pendley speaks at a conference for journalist­s in Fort Collins, Colo. [MATTHEW BROWN/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO]

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