Look West: Public lands and energy news from the Center for Western Priorities
** Emails shed light on early Zinke ethics concerns
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Tuesday, September 12, 2023
Ryan Zinke in 2018. Photo: Gage Skidmore, via Wikimedia Commons ([link removed](39628699355).jpg)
Newly released emails show Interior Department staffers raised concerns about Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke's ethical conflicts more than a year before Zinke resigned under a cloud of scandal. E&E News obtained the documents ([link removed]) under a 6-year-old Freedom of Information Act request.
The emails reveal that career ethics officials raised red flags over the role that Zinke's wife Lolita played at Interior ([link removed]) , where she often traveled with her husband on government trips and sat in on department meetings. The Interior lawyers noted that at the time, Lolita Zinke was also running two family businesses and a nonprofit organization.
Those businesses and nonprofit would end up at the center of the scandal that ultimately cost Zinke his job ([link removed]) in 2018—a proposed real estate development with the then-chair of Halliburton, an oilfield services firm.
In an April 2017 email obtained by E&E ([link removed]) , Interior attorney Edward McDonnell warned that while Zinke “no longer holds a management position in Continental Divide, LLC, or Double Tap, LLC, he retains a financial interest in both entities” through Lolita. “If, as a result of her accompanying the Secretary, Mrs. Zinke obtains access to information or is in a position to take an action that could affect the financial interest of either entity, this could be problematic.”
Last year, Interior's watchdog issued a report ([link removed]) accusing the former secretary of misusing his office, failing to follow his ethics obligations, and making inaccurate statements about his involvement in the real estate deal.
Gone fishin’
Look West is taking a mid-week break while the CWP team enjoys some time on our public lands. We'll be back on Friday.
** Quick hits
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Wyoming is killing Colorado’s wolves and keeping it a secret
WyoFile ([link removed])
Arizona Senate president plans to sue over new national monument despite century of legal precedent
Arizona Capitol Times ([link removed])
Opinion: We can help shape the future of Grand Staircase-Escalante
Writers on the Range ([link removed])
How four fish species will affect long-term plans for the Colorado River
KLAS ([link removed])
All Pueblo Council of Governors: Don't sacrifice sacred lands to the oil and gas industry
The Hill ([link removed])
Interior awards $3.5 million to Indigenous groups and Tribal nations for youth service
Durango Herald ([link removed])
Colorado's Mount Evans will get renamed on Friday
Denver7 ([link removed])
Beaver deceiver team helps humans and rodents coexist
Summit Daily ([link removed])
** Quote of the day
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” Essentially, one state is blocking a national success story from happening. It is absolute night and day, either side of this invisible line, which is always not good for wildlife.”
—Rangeland scientist Matt Barnes, WyoFile ([link removed])
** Picture This
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@mypubliclands ([link removed])
Woolly, woolly, woolly, can’t you see sometimes your stripes just hypnotize me?
The woolly bear caterpillar: predictor of winters, the hedgehog caterpillar, or fuzzy little guys. Legend has it that their stripes can tell us the intensity of the upcoming winter - the longer their black bands, the colder and snowier the winter will be.
Although this is folklore, it is fun to check out their stripes and make some predictions. Keep an eye out for these fuzzy caterpillars as you walk through your public lands this month. They can be seen wandering across paths in search of a wintering spot (usually under leaf litter), and in the spring, they will emerge to become Isabella Tiger Moths. 🦋🐛
📷 A black and brown woolly bear caterpillar crawls across a rock; Wildwood Recreation Site, @blmoregonwashington ([link removed]) , BLM photo.
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