From Center for Western Priorities <[email protected]>
Subject Look West Monthly: September, In Brief
Date September 30, 2019 6:30 PM
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** September, in brief
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Views are nothing short of epic @YellowstoneNPS ([link removed]) | @Interior ([link removed])


** Key news from September:
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* The Senate voted ([link removed]) to confirm Daniel Jorjani to be the Interior Department Solicitor. Interior's Inspector General recently announced that Jorjani is being investigated ([link removed]) , and Senator Ron Wyden has requested ([link removed]) the Department of Justice to investigate if Jorjani committed perjury during his confirmation hearing.

* Acting BLM Director William Perry Pendley testified before Congress on the agency's relocation plans, leaving many lawmakers without the answers ([link removed]) they needed. Internal documents suggest Pendley misled Congress ([link removed]) on the BLM relocation plans. Pendley also released a 17-page list ([link removed]) of companies, individuals, and organizations he would recuse himself from to avoid making decisions that would create conflicts of interest.

* The Senate agreed on a proposed federal budget that does not include funding ([link removed]) for the BLM headquarters move. Reports surfaced that the new headquarters will share ([link removed]) an office building in Grand Junction, Colorado with numerous oil and gas companies. The plans will spread employees that work with Congress across the West
([link removed]) and shrink the agency's environmental review team ([link removed]) .

* William Perry Pendley recused himself from litigation involving ([link removed]) the President's reduction of national monuments in Utah. However, he remains listed as an attorney ([link removed]) on a Utah county lawsuit against the monuments.

* Against the advice of its own scientists, the Interior Department is moving forward ([link removed]) with a proposal to raise the height of Northern California's Shasta Dam, marking another win for one of Secretary Bernhardt's former lobbying clients, the politically powerful Westlands Water District.

* A top government watchdog concluded ([link removed]) the Interior Department broke the law by diverting funds from national park entrance fees to keep parks open, but understaffed, during the latest government shutdown.

* Interior Secretary David Bernhardt quietly signed a directive ([link removed]) allowing electric bikes on any public trail currently open to bicycles, including those in national parks. Several national parks also announced ([link removed]) certain back roads would be opened to ATVs and UTVs. Both shifts were initiated without any public input. The administration has recently taken steps
([link removed]) to muzzle park superintendents and stop them from airing concerns to the public about changes in and around parks.


** What to watch for in October:
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* Under the administration's order, William Perry Pendley will only serve as acting BLM director until September 30. It’s possible Pendley will be formally nominated to become permanent BLM director.

* Secretary Bernhardt will be attending ([link removed]) the Society of Environmental Journalists conference in Colorado, where he will be speaking.

* The Center for Western Priorities will be releasing its Winning the West 2019 poll this Thursday ([link removed][UNIQID]&u=6b3f59dc19c07727b0b196979&id=fb926a4db3) .

Best Reads of the Month


** Report finds industry influence in Interior Department's effort to mine "critical" minerals
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Project on Government Oversight ([link removed])


** Trump administration leading public lands liquidation in Alaska
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Huffington Post ([link removed])


** Abandoned oil and gas wells could cost U.S. taxpayers $46 million to $333 million in reclamation costs
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Associated Press ([link removed])


** Could a president ban all fracking in the U.S.?
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CNN ([link removed])


** Opinion: Trump wants to spoil Alaska's pristine environment, but we can't let it happen
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Washington Post ([link removed])


** Editorial: Trump administration to drillers, miners, and loggers—This land is your land
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New York Times ([link removed])
From the Center for Western Priorities:
The Wilderness Society and the Center for Western Priorities released new geospatial analysis today, offering a data-driven look at low-cost oil and gas leasing on public lands in the West. The oil and gas industry currently leases 17.7 million acres of public lands in ten Western states—Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and Wyoming—locking up lands for development and preventing them from being actively managed for conservation and recreation. According to our analysis ([link removed]) , 32 percent of all public lands and minerals actively leased for oil and gas were sold for just $2.00 per acre or less—totaling 5.7 million acres.
Visit the story map by clicking HERE ([link removed])


**
Westwise Blog:
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[link removed]


** Trump pick for top Interior lawyer stalled after perjury allegations ([link removed])
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** Former Koch advisor Daniel Jorjani has dismal track record leading department’s ethics, transparency programs

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[link removed]


** Congressman Grijalva and friends on why the Sonoran Desert is worth protecting ([link removed])
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** Highlights from the Center for Western Priorities’ live podcast in Tucson, Arizona
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**
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** Story Map: America’s Public Lands Giveaway ([link removed])
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** Oil and gas companies are paying bargain rates to acquire and sit on millions of acres
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**
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**
Go West, Young Podcast:
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Live in Montana ([link removed])

We wrap up the Go West, Young Podcast summer road trip in Missoula, Montana, just in time for National Public Lands Day.
[link removed]
Sen. Jon Tester returns ([link removed])

In this episode of CWP’s Go West, Young Podcast ([link removed]) , Senator Jon Tester of Montana talks about the need to permanently fund the Land & Water Conservation Fund, how public lands became a key issue for Montana voters, and the need to address climate change sooner rather than later.
[link removed]
Live in Tucson with Rep. Raúl Grijalva and friends ([link removed])

Go West, Young Podcast ([link removed]) stopped in Tucson, Arizona for a conversation with House Natural Resources Committee Chairman Raúl Grijalva, Sonoran Institue CEO Stephanie Sklar, and NativesOutdoors founder Len Necefer.

Quote of the month


** This is not just a political fight, an ideological fight, this is a fundamental fight about those shared values that we have, those areas that have been conserved for generations... suddenly we find ourselves trying to hang on to what we have, instead of growing the equity of the American people's holdings which is their public lands and their waterways, and their coastlines and their oceans.”

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** —Chairman Raúl Grijalva, on the importance of protecting public lands, Westwise ([link removed])
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**
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Picture this

Since Congress updated the leasing process in 1987, 42.1 million acres, or 60 percent of all oil and gas leases issued, have been purchased for the minimum bid or noncompetitively.
[Click here to view the story map ([link removed]) ]

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