Horse News

Congress clamps down on Bernhardt in wake of damaging report on BLM move

By Emily Hayes as published on The Durango Herald

Secretary of the Interior skirted direct questions

U.S. Secretary of the Interior David Bernhardt continually stonewalled inquiries about the Bureau of Land Management’s controversial move to Grand Junction in multiple hearings earlier this week before the U.S. Congress.

Originally scheduled to address concerns with proposed budget cuts for the Department of the Interior for 2021, members of Congress used the hearing to prod Bernhardt on a recent report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office. The report holds President Donald Trump’s administration accountable for not following best practices in moving the BLM headquarters to Grand Junction, including its failure to involve employees and key stakeholders in its plans.

“I found the comments regarding the BLM move outlandish,” Bernhardt testified before a House Appropriations Subcommittee on Wednesday. “The concept that we are doing something to tear it down is fundamentally flawed.”

House Natural Resources Committee Chairman Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz., has said the report demonstrates how the Trump administration attempted to weaken the agency.

Manipulation of the facts?

In the move out West, the BLM has lost more than half of its Washington-based employees. Out of the 170 employees who received a relocation notice, 81 declined or left their positions, according to the report. The move also splits a team that reviews environmental impacts of major land decisions, and scatters it across various states.

The BLM hopes to complete the move by summer, meaning the dwindling staff in the nation’s capital will be reduced to 61 of the original 10,000 employees by then.

Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., has long supported the BLM’s move out West, with the idea that it would allow the agency to work better. But because the Department of the Interior didn’t work with Congress to develop a “durable, bipartisan plan, and rushed through the process,” as Bennet wrote in an emailed statement to The Durango Herald, the BLM lost “many dedicated civil servants.”

“On top of that, the administration continues to trust William Perry Pendley to lead the BLM, despite his history of advocating for the widespread sale of public lands,” Bennet said.

Bernhardt said the Interior is receiving many applications from “high-quality folks” to fill empty positions in the West. The secretary also said that when he recently visited the field offices, the staff was “ecstatic that things are moving forward with this relocation,” and that the BLM office in Grand Junction will be fully operational by December.

But members of both the House and the Senate had trouble believing Bernhardt based on recent findings by the Government Accountability Office, as well as reports in The New York Times that revealed manipulation of science on climate change and conservation in the Department of the Interior.

BLM staff numbers released in the new report from the Government Accountability Office also differ from what Acting BLM Director Pendley stated in December – that two-thirds of BLM employees agreed to the move.

Bernhardt chalked up denial language on climate change in the reports to “back and forth between experts” on the facts.

Rep. Chellie Pingree, D-Maine, said that while scientists may disagree on all the details of climate change, she doesn’t know of any experts who would say releasing carbon dioxide into the atmosphere is not bad for the environment.

“You can search it on YouTube,” Bernhardt said of the scientists who believe carbon dioxide release is not bad for the climate…(CONTINUED)

https://durangoherald.com/articles/318309

8 replies »

  1. Seems no one has commented on this article – but then only Facebook comments are allowed! Too bad. Sounds like more lying from this department of the administration – actually, very few seem to comprehend telling the truth!

    Liked by 2 people

    • I never was interested in Facebook – know many people who “swear by it”!! Not me.
      It is frustrating tho not to be able to say what I think about some of these articles – right?
      Scary times here. Very glad I live in the country rather than being in a city – large or small!
      I’m kind of hunkering down & staying home – safer that way – i hope.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. The artificial territory they outlined is completely fenced, and if a horse is already off the territory, which most are, they couldn’t easily get back on it if they wanted to. And they want to leave a few token horses in that boundary area and remove all the rest of the herd.

    We want to know…If the Forest Service believes this land was not historically, and currently used by the horses to move from point A to point B how did they get back and forth? Teleportation??

    https://citizensagainstequineslaughter.wpcomstaging.com/2020/03/16/heber-wild-horse-territory-management-plan/

    Liked by 1 person

  3. MOBILE BILLBOARD

    ‘Corrupt & Corrupter’: DC Billboard Ridicules Trump and Bernhardt

    Lumping President Donald Trump and U.S. Secretary of the Interior David Bernhardt together as a pair of hapless (yet dangerous) stooges working in service of the fossil fuel industry, an environmental watchdog group this week is driving a mobile billboard around Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. in order to call out the tenacious greed and corruption of the current administration.
    https://www.commondreams.org/news/2019/12/09/corrupt-corrupter-dc-billboard-ridicules-trump-and-bernhardt-two-greedy-idiots

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Trump administration continues to sell oil rights amid industry slump. March 24, 2020.

    “The Trump administration is pushing ahead with drilling lease sales as oil prices plummet and amid calls from conservation groups and others to suspend business as usual during the coronavirus outbreak.

    The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) held lease sales in Wyoming, Montana, Nevada and Colorado on Monday, selling oil rights on parcels of public land covering hundreds of thousands of acres.

    But taxpayer groups argue the sales come at an inopportune time, as oil prices fall to roughly $23 a barrel, risking generating little income for the treasury.

    “In this environment, it is impossible for the American taxpayer to expect anywhere near a fair return on oil and gas leases,” Conservatives for Responsible Stewardship and Taxpayers for Common Sense wrote last week, encouraging the administration to suspend lease sales for the rest of the year.

    The groups’ analysis of lease sales in Utah in mid-March found 90 percent of acres sold received the minimum bid of $2 per acre.”

    https://thehill.com/policy/energy-environment/489269-trump-administration-continues-to-sell-oil-rights-amid-industry

    Like

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