Public land protectors are ready for a fight

By Jennifer Rokala

President Donald Trump’s first term was a disaster for America’s public lands. While the prospects for his second term are even more bleak, Westerners across the political spectrum—even those who voted for Trump—stand ready to oppose attempts to sell off America’s public lands to the highest bidder.

As for Trump’s pick for Interior Secretary, North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum: If Burgum tries to turn America’s public lands into an even bigger cash cow for the oil and gas industry, or tries to shrink America’s parks and national monuments, he’ll quickly discover he’s on the wrong side of history.

Public lands have strong bipartisan support in the West. The annual Conservation in the West Poll, last released by the Colorado College State of the Rockies Project in February 2024, found that nearly three-quarters of voters—including Republicans—want to protect clean water, air quality and wildlife habitats, while providing opportunities to visit and recreate on public lands.

That’s compared to just one-quarter of voters who prefer maximizing the use of public lands available for drilling and mining. According to the poll, which surveyed voters in Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming—80 % of Westerners support the national goal of conserving 30 % of land and waters in America by the year 2030.

Bipartisan support for more conservation and balanced energy development has been a cornerstone of the poll’s findings since it began in 2011. Under the leadership of President Joe Biden and Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, the current administration has made progress over the past four years in bringing public land management in line with the preferences of Western voters. That includes better protecting the Grand Canyon, increasing accountability for oil and gas companies that operate on public land, and putting conservation—at last—on par with drilling and mining on public land.

The President-elect may find it hard to immediately block what Westerners want. After Trump took office in 2017 promising to transform public land management, his team was unprepared and used its power to benefit its own interests, ignoring the wishes of the American people.

Trump’s first Interior secretary, Ryan Zinke, misused his position to advance his dream of owning a microbrewery in Montana. Trump’s second Interior secretary, oil and gas industry lobbyist David Bernhardt, put his finger on the scale in the interest of a former client. Trump’s choice to run the Bureau of Land Management, William Perry Pendley, served illegally without being confirmed by Congress.

We worked hard to shed light on this corruption and defend public lands from Trump’s attacks. Still, Trump’s Interior department allowed oil and gas companies to lock up millions of acres for bargain basement prices.

In his second term, Donald Trump will attempt to shrink national monuments like Bears Ears in Utah and permit drilling and mining in inappropriate areas. The president-elect has already committed to undoing President Joe Biden’s energy and environmental policies.

Project 2025, the policy handbook written by former Trump

officials, clearly lays out a plan to gut the Interior Department and remove environmental safeguards that ensure the health of our public lands.

Project 2025 would give extractive industries nearly unfettered access to public lands, severely restrict the power of the Endangered Species Act, open millions of acres of Alaska wilderness to drilling, mining and logging and roll back protections for spectacular landscapes like Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante national monuments. It would also remove protections for iconic Western species such as gray wolves and grizzly bears.

What can we do about this assault? The law and public opinion are on our side. Public land protections are stronger today than ever, thanks in large part to the grassroots efforts of Tribes, local community leaders and conservation organizations.

We know much of what’s in Trump’s public lands playbook, and we will fight back. We’ll continue to shine a light on corruption within the Trump administration and hold it accountable.

Our partners will work in Congress to stop bad policies and projects from going forward. We are ready to take action in the courts and in the streets. And we’re not waiting until Inauguration Day to start.

Jennifer Rokala is a contributor to Writers on the Range, writersontherange.org, an independent nonprofit dedicated to spurring lively conversation about Western issues. She is executive director of Center for Western Priorities, a nonpartisan public lands advocacy group.

The Citadel, Bears Ears National Monument, Dave Marston photo

This column was published in the following newspapers:

11/18/2024 Vail Daily Vail CO
11/19/2024 Montrose Daily Press Montrose CO
11/19/2024 Sierra Nevada Ally Carson City NV
11/23/2024 Wenatchee World Wenatchee WA
11/13/2024 Jackson Hole News & Guide Jackson Hole WY
11/22/2024 Methow Valley News Twisp WA
11/23/2024 Pagosa Springs Sun Pagosa Springs CO
11/20/2024 Salt Lake Tribune Salt Lake City UT
11/24/2024 Tucson Star Tucson AZ
11/24/2024 Cochise County Herald Review Cochise County AZ
11/24/2024 Denver Post Denver CO
11/24/2024 Laramie Boomerang Laramie WY
11/24/2024 Aspen Daily News Aspen CO
11/24/2024 Taos News Taos NM
11/24/2024 Coyote Gulch Denver CO
11/25/2024 Laramie Boomerang Laramie WY
11/20/2024 Durango Telegraph Durango CO
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Michelle
21 days ago

Why would you put blatant lies in a conservative areas newspaper? Trump deporting illegals will raise prices because we will have a shortage of workers…. seriously? Let’s try, the illegals are costing taxpayers 150.7 billion a year! Not mention the crime, housing shortages, hospitals over capacity, prisons too full and terrible education system because the teachers can’t keep up with the influx or language barrier. I understand the right to free speech, but lies are completely unacceptable and everyone in these small Utah towns know the difference!

David Marston
21 days ago
Reply to  Michelle

Hello, you’re right, the numbers are astounding. I’m afraid you might be mistaken in calling them COSTS. They are actually BENEFITS to people like yourself, assuming you are a citizen.. Undocumented workers paid $96.7 billion in U.S. taxes in 2022, including $59.4 billion in payments to the federal government and $37.3 billion in payments to states and localities. Bear in mind they are not eligible for benefits for these taxes. So, while they contribute over $250 billion to our economy annually, we get a free ride on their shoulders in terms of them bolstering our social programs. Workers work, regardless of status. Do you work? If you don’t, you are probably getting government payout from people here without documentation. Thank you for helping make that clear.

Public land protectors are ready for a fight — Jennifer Rokala (WritersOnTheRange.org) – Coyote Gulch
19 days ago

[…] the link to read the article on the Writers on the Range website (Jennifer […]

s. arthur
13 days ago

My father worked on the Colorado National Monument on Colorado’s Western Slope (his adjacent job was a farmer) for 30 years and retired with a govt pension in the 80’s. He (and we) were so proud of his job as an electrical maintenance worker and of the monument and its grand beauty. We took any visitors for a scary ride across the monument, went there as teenagers to enjoy the potholes and Devil’s Kitchen. I was heartbroken when, during Trump’s first term, the funding to the park system was drastically cut and threats to the parks themselves increased as the beautiful parks were in danger of becoming monetized for private and public companies (not to mention people who wanted a “share.”) I will continue to support the National Park Service with donations, and am open to any ideas to help. Here is the donation site; http://bit.ly/49coVbX

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