The Denver Post

Routt County seeks to protect its land

- By Kit Geary

Routt County commission­ers are preparing a letter of support for protecting public lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management in Routt County to prevent oil and gas leasing and developmen­t.

The letter is on the consent agenda for Routt County commission­ers’ meeting on Tuesday.

Soren Jespersen, field director of Colorado Wildlands Project, approached Routt County commission­ers on Feb. 6 to ask for a letter of support and the county’s participat­ion in a current revision of a planning process. The Colorado Wildlands Project is an advocacy group that works to protect public lands managed by the BLM. “The Bureau of Land Management always operates as a good partner with municipali­ties, communitie­s, and counties adjacent to their land, so that is what we are asking Routt County to engage in the plan to ensure the interests of the county are represente­d,” Jespersen said.

The U. S. District Court in Colorado mandated in a 2019 settlement that the BLM must redo portions of a 2015 plan that failed to properly analyze the impacts of oil and gas production on greenhouse gas emissions.

Portions of the plan that need to be revisited in Routt County involve lands that are considered high value. Commission­ers consider these highly valued because they contribute to robust wildlife population­s, healthy watersheds and include recreation­al hotspots such as Emerald Mountain and King Mountain.

Jespersen said that although the area of land is relatively small, its importance to the recreation and wildlife integrity of the county is much larger. Additional­ly, opening up these lands to oil and gas leasing and developmen­t has the potential to jeopardize their recreation­al and ecological values, according to Jespersen. In their letter addressed to the BLM’S district manager, Routt County commission­ers stress the fact oil and gas developmen­t is not currently a public land use that significan­tly contribute­s to the country’s economy.

“The areas we are talking about are not places that oil and gas companies are knocking on the door to drill; these are places that have been open to drilling for years but haven’t been,” Jespersen said.

Jespersen indicated that closing these areas to new oil and gas developmen­t would protect them in the future.

Commission­ers also noted in their letter that these lands are already at risk due to stressors stemming from climate change, habitat loss, drought and increased visitation.

The BLM Colorado River Valley Field Office and Grand Junction Field Office include approximat­ely 33,000 acres of surface land in Routt County that will be included in the revision of the Resource Management Plan Supplement­al Environmen­tal Impact Statement.

The BLM also manages 30,000 acres of subsurface land with split-estate federally managed fluid mineral resources. Basically, private landowners own the surface land, while the BLM manages the mineral rights underneath it.

On Feb. 6, the commission­ers showed particular concern for the King Mountain Recreation Area, which provides a rare opportunit­y for hunters to hunt in a nonmotoriz­ed area.

Commission­ers closed the letter by emphasizin­g that half of the lands in Routt County are public and rely on federal land management agencies to protect it.

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