From Center for Western Priorities <[email protected]>
Subject Look West: Bundy actions could spark new confrontation with BLM over monument
Date May 14, 2020 1:46 PM
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** Bundy actions could spark new confrontation with BLM over monument
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Thursday, May 14, 2020
Ammon and Ryan Bundy | Multnomah County Sherriff

The Bureau of Land Management is investigating claims ([link removed]) that Ryan Bundy illegally built irrigation trenches across Gold Butte National Monument in Nevada. A four-page complaint submitted to the agency last month by a group of hikers includes GPS coordinates and photos of equipment used to lay irrigation pipe, stating "It's a true scar where just that morning there had been pristine desert."

The Bundy family, famous for leading multiple armed standoffs ([link removed]) with federal officials, has illegally grazed cattle on public lands in the area since 1993, racking up millions in unpaid grazing fees and damaging a sensitive landscape. New irrigation may indicate the family is looking to increase their number of cattle, further damaging the national monument and setting up yet another confrontation with the BLM.

Unfortunately for Gold Butte, the Trump administration has sided with public land extremists like the Bundys, placing BLM leadership in a bind. In 2018, President Trump pardoned two ranchers ([link removed]) whose case sparked the armed takeover of a wildlife refuge, and the previous year he dramatically reduced national monuments in Utah. These actions have only emboldened Ryan Bundy, who told E&E News ([link removed]) , "Gold Butte is not located on land belonging to the United States. Gold Butte is land [within] the external boundaries of the sovereign Nevada State, an admitted State of the Union. And therefore I know nothing of which you speak regarding irrigation on a non-existent monument."


** Join the Road to 30 Virtual Tour
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Next Tuesday, May 19 at 3:00pm ET, join the Center for Western Priorities and the Sierra Club to kick off a virtual road tour ([link removed]) discussing the bold vision to protect 30 percent of America by 2030—a goal that can conserve nature, strengthen communities, and increase public health.
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Quick hits


** Forest Service report suggests widespread coronavirus risk at firefighting camps
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Associated Press ([link removed])


** BLM proposal to open non-motorized trails to e-bikes draws controversy in Colorado
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Colorado Sun ([link removed])


** Trump administration to hold virtual meetings on Chaco drilling plans, but affected tribes have limited internet
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The Independent ([link removed])


** U.S. poised to produce more energy from renewables than from coal in 2020
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New York Times ([link removed])


** In Wyoming, BLM manages 18 million acres—11 million are leased for oil and gas
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Wyoming Public Media ([link removed])


** States, tribes seek to suspend coal leases on public lands
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Associated Press ([link removed])


** Yellowstone, Grand Teton, Grand Canyon National Parks to begin reopening
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Reuters ([link removed]) | Los Angeles Times ([link removed]) | The Hill ([link removed]) | Wall Street Journal ([link removed])


** Audit finds Utah program intended to reduce impacts of drilling is funding projects that could make them worse
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Salt Lake Tribune ([link removed])
Quote of the day
The grid is changing so much faster than anyone expected. A decade ago, I was teaching my students that coal was the ‘baseload’ source that runs all the time, and solar was something you might sprinkle in if you want to pay more. Now coal’s been pushed to the margins and it’s wind and solar that are the cheapest options.”
—Daniel Cohan ([link removed]) , associate professor of civil and environmental engineering, Rice University
Picture this


** @Interior ([link removed])
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The Milky Way marvelously illuminates the deep canyon at Morley Nelson Snake River Birds of Prey National Conservation Area. #Idaho ([link removed])

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