Montana Conservationist Nominated to Head US Bureau of Land Management

This story by Jacob Fischler appeared on Colorado Newsline on April 14, 2021.

President Joe Biden intends to nominate National Wildlife Federation senior adviser and veteran Montana Democrat Tracy Stone-Manning to direct the Bureau of Land Management, an individual familiar with the process confirmed to States Newsroom Wednesday.

Stone-Manning joined the NWF as associate vice president for public lands in 2017 and was promoted to senior adviser for conservation policy in January. She had worked as chief of staff to former Montana Gov. Steve Bullock, a Democrat, after a stint leading the state’s Department of Environmental Quality during Bullock’s administration. She also was an aide to Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) from 2006 to 2012.

BLM is part of the Department of the Interior.

Politico Pro first reported the nomination, spurring reaction from conservation groups and Democrats who praised the move.

“This would be a big deal for Montana and for all Americans who value our public lands and the thousands of good-paying jobs that depend on their responsible stewardship,” Tester said in a statement.

“Having Tracy Stone Manning lead the BLM will be an incredible boon for Montana and our nation,” Ben Gabriel, the executive director for the Montana Wilderness Association, said in a statement. “She’s a straight shooter, with an impressive history of working on both sides of the aisle for the good of public lands, wildlife, water quality, and Montana’s rural communities.”

Gabriel also called on Montana’s other US senator, Republican Steve Daines, to support the confirmation.

A spokeswoman for Daines, who sits on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee that would consider Stone-Manning’s confirmation, did not return a message seeking comment. Representatives for the NWF declined to comment Wednesday.

The BLM could be a key venue to advance conservation and climate policy, a priority Biden has said for years would be a central part of his presidency. The bureau manages nearly 250 million acres of public lands, almost all of it in the West, including Colorado.

It is also responsible for approving oil and gas leases on federal lands. Biden paused new leases shortly after taking office, while ordering a review of federal leasing policy. Emissions from oil and gas development on federal lands accounts for nearly one-quarter of greenhouse gas emissions in the country, according to the US Geological Survey.

If confirmed, Stone-Manning would face unusual challenges for a new BLM leader. The BLM did not have a confirmed director during former President Donald Trump’s time in office. William Perry Pendley, a deputy director who previously worked as an anti-government legal activist, was the de facto leader but lacked the support in the Senate, even from some Republicans, to win confirmation for the full-time post. A Montana federal judge invalidated some decisions the BLM made during Pendley’s time in office because he was serving illegitimately.

The Trump administration also oversaw the move of BLM headquarters from Washington to Grand Junction. The move was criticized by many Democrats and conservationists who viewed it as weakening the bureau’s influence in Washington and expected it to drive out many of the agency’s career experts.

In her position with the NWF, Stone-Manning criticized Pendley’s record and said the BLM should have a director who believed in the bureau’s multiple-use mission. Stone-Manning’s backers said she was well-suited to help the bureau reverse the direction Pendley had set it on.

Jennifer Rokala, the executive director for the liberal conservation group Center for Western Priorities, said in a statement Pendley was a “rubber stamp” for the oil and gas industry and said she expected Stone-Manning to consider a broader range of interests.

“The damage wrought by the Trump administration on an agency which manages one-tenth of the land area in the United States is almost incalculable,” said Rokala. “Stone-Manning’s depth of expertise and breadth of knowledge will be critical assets in reforming the Bureau of Land Management and restoring trust in our public land managers.”

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