Los Angeles Times

Senators scrutinize Interior nominee

Some worry REI chief Sally Jewell’s ties to conservati­on groups may shade her views on fossil fuels.

- By Neela Banerjee neela.banerjee @latimes.com

WASHINGTON — President Obama’s nominee to steer the Interior Department, REI Chief Executive Sally Jewell, vowed Thursday to balance competing demands on public lands for conservati­on and resource exploitati­on. But several senators of both parties expressed wariness of Jewell’s involvemen­t in conservati­on groups, suggesting that she might not adequately support fossil fuel developmen­t on federal acreage.

Sen. John Barrasso (RWyo.) has focused on Jewell’s tenure on the board of the National Parks Conservati­on Assn., an advocacy group, as a possible barrier to her fairness.

During Jewell’s confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, Barrasso described the group as having sued the government, including the Interior Department, on “behalf of policies that put people in Wyoming and across America out of work” because of challenges the associatio­n has made to some fossil fuel and uranium developmen­t efforts.

Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin III questioned Jewell about her previous support for cap-and-trade legislatio­n, a measure he opposes because he represents West Virginia, a coal state that could be hit hard by placing a price on carbon dioxide emissions.

And Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), the committee’s ranking minority member, threatened to place a hold on Jewell’s nomination because of the Interior Department’s decision to reject a proposal Murkowski favors to build a road through a wildlife refuge in her state to a local airport.

“King Cove will stand as a prime example of federal overreach and the harm it causes,” Murkowski said, referring to the road issue. “And the reality is, nearly all of us, especially in Western states, have our own King Cove. We are all aware of instances where misguided federal restrictio­ns are making it harder for local people to live, be safe and to prosper.”

But some Republican­s on the panel, such as Sen. Lamar Alexander (RTenn.), were impressed with Jewell’s business background, going so far as to say that she seemed the kind of candidate a Republican president would appoint.

Although Jewell, 58, has been meeting privately with senators over the last few weeks, the hearing was the first chance many in industry and the environmen­tal community had to hear her views on managing public lands. For the most part, she hewed to administra­tion talking points about achieving balance among various demands on public lands and pursuing an “all of the above” energy policy. She also underscore­d the growing focus on climate change.

Jewell is a newcomer to Washington. Interior secretarie­s have traditiona­lly been Western politician­s, in part because most federal lands are in the West.

But her roots are in private industry and conservati­on. Born in Britain and raised in Washington state, Jewell worked as an engineer in the oil industry after college before going into banking and then moving to REI, which she helped build into a $2-billion-a-year company. At the same time, she worked on land conservati­on efforts and served on the board of trustees of the National Parks Conservati­on Assn.

A vote on the nomination could come as early as next week, a committee staff member said.

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