The Trump administration announced it's going to reopen the land management plan around Rock Springs, Wyoming — a plan that took years to craft and was just finalized in December 2024. Wyoming Governor Mark Gordon said that the Bureau of Land Management will give “the public another opportunity to weigh in on the plan."
As the Biden administration wrote and revised the plan in 2023 and 2024, an analysis by the Center for Western Priorities found that 92 percent of public comments supported the conservation measures in the Rock Springs plan. Governor Gordon convened a task force to provide additional feedback to BLM; an analysis by the Wyoming Outdoor Council and the Wilderness Society found 85 percent of the task force's recommendations made it into the final management plan.
The final plan allowed for a mix of fossil fuels, renewable energy, and conservation across 3.6 million acres of national public lands in southwest Wyoming.
Julia Stuble, the Wyoming state director for the Wilderness Society, called on the Trump administration to “show equal commitments to the public by not short-cutting comment periods, skirting planning rules, or disregarding statutes,” adding that “attempts to speed through the process or ignore input from hunters, anglers, and recreationists will lead to an unbalanced plan that is a disservice to Wyoming and the nation."
It's unclear if the Bureau of Land Management has the capacity to undertake a similar review process. The agency's Wyoming state director and national deputy director are both on leave and under investigation; Interior Secretary Doug Burgum has not appointed a principal deputy director; and President Donald Trump's nominee to run BLM was forced to withdraw when the White House learned she acknowledged President Joe Biden's victory in 2020.
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