The comment period for the Bureau of Land Management’s proposed public lands rule ended last week, and tens of thousands took the time to weigh in.
Congress tasked the BLM with managing millions of acres of public land for a number of uses – like energy development, livestock grazing and recreation. The agency says the new rule would put conservation on equal footing with other uses. Among other measures, it would create conservation leases, a new tool that would allow applicants to carry out restoration or mitigation projects.
More than 216,000 people commented over the last three months.
“It was a stunningly large response,” said Deputy Director Aaron Weiss of the Center for Western Priorities, a public lands advocacy group that supports the rule. “Considering this is, at the end of the day, a fairly technical rulemaking regarding how the Bureau of Land Management does its job in the West.”
The group analyzed a sizable, randomized selection of responses and found that over 90% of them supported the BLM proposal. The others were opposed, neutral or mixed.
Weiss said the message from most of those who commented was clear: They either want the rule to be adopted as proposed – or would like to see the BLM “strengthen the conservation measures in it.”
Many industry groups have criticized the proposal. A joint comment submitted in early July by the American Petroleum Institute and several other oil and gas groups argued that the rule raises “foundational separation of powers concerns” and “offers scarce statutory backing for upsetting a balance Congress has carefully crafted.”
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