The Mercury News

Land agency will move back to D.C.

-

WASHINGTON >> Interior Secretary Deb Haaland is moving the national headquarte­rs of the Bureau of Land Management back to the nation’s capital after two years in Colorado, reversing a decision by former President Donald Trump’s administra­tion to move the agency closer to the region it serves.

The land management bureau, which oversees nearly one-fifth of the nation’s public lands, lost nearly 300 employees to retirement or resignatio­n after its headquarte­rs was moved to Grand Junction, Colorado, in 2019. Grand Junction will be rechristen­ed the agency’s “western headquarte­rs,” Haaland said in a news release, and “have an important role to play in the bureau’s clean energy, outdoor recreation, conservati­on, and scientific missions.”

With control of 245 million acres, the agency has broad influence over energy developmen­t and agricultur­e in the western U.S., managing public lands for uses ranging from fossil fuel extraction, renewable power developmen­t and grazing, to recreation and wilderness.

Trump’s first interior secretary, Ryan Zinke, initiated the headquarte­rs move west and called it a needed reorganiza­tion that put top agency officials closer to the public lands it oversees. The move was completed under David Bernhardt, who succeeded Zinke in 2019.

Critics said the Trump administra­tion intended to gut the agency and pointed to the number of people who refused to transfer to Colorado as evidence of the administra­tion’s bid to get rid of career employees. A similar mass exodus occurred after two Agricultur­e Department research agencies were moved from Washington to Kansas City, Missouri, under Trump.

Haaland, who opposed the BLM move as a congresswo­man from New Mexico, visited the Colorado headquarte­rs in July a fter being confirmed as interior secretary.

Top Colorado Democrats, including Gov. Jared Polis and members of the state’s congressio­nal delegation, wanted the headquarte­rs to stay in Grand Junction. Democratic U.S. Sen. John Hickenloop­er said Haaland’s decision to keep a presence in Grand Junction “will help ensure we have a fully functionin­g agency that understand­s the West.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States