New Breed And New Politics
Predominate At BLM Of Today
WASHINGTON (AP) New Mexico rancher Alonso
Gallegos remembers a time not too long ago when renewing
a grazing permit with the Bureau of Land Management was
just a matter of filling out paperwork.
This year, renewing 10-year permits to graze cattle or
sheep on the federal land BLM manages is much more
complicated. There are environmental impact studies to be
done, public comments to be gathered, resource management
plans to be consulted.
``It's a lot of changes when we've grazed this land
forever,'' said Gallegos, who runs 96 head of cattle on
6000 acres of BLM land near Santa Fe on a ranch that's
been in his family since before there was a BLM.
``Something's happening here lately that's a change,''
agreed Tommy Caniglia, who manages the U-Cross ranch in
the arid, rugged Arizona backcountry between Phoenix and
Prescott. ``I think the BLM is under tremendous pressure
from the masses of Phoenix, the recreational people. They
want this area.''
These are days of dramatic changes at the Bureau of
Land Management, which is responsible for about 264
million acres in the West 11 percent of the
nation's land, an area almost as large as Arizona, New
Mexico, Colorado and Utah combined.
Used to be that the BLM was not-so-jokingly dubbed the
Bureau of Livestock and Mining, an agency unabashedly run
by ranchers and miners for ranchers and miners. Nobody
else was much interested in BLM land anyway. The dry,
remote canyon bottoms and chaparral highlands were not
considered spectacular or lush enough to be national
forests or national parks.
``In the old days, BLM was basically a doormat,'' said
Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt. ``When something good
came along, it went to the Fish and Wildlife Service or
the National Park Service. BLM was sort of viewed as
mining and grazing because nobody ever suggested they
should be anything else.''
The West's population boom and the election of
President Clinton changed that.
Two-thirds of Westerners now live within an hour's
drive of BLM land. With more people came more demand for
hiking, off-road vehicle use and hunting on BLM land, as
well as more attention from environmental activists. With
the Clinton administration came Babbitt and other
managers with a view toward promoting recreation and
conservation, as well as more stringent interpretations
of environmental laws.
Babbitt and BLM director Tom Fry say they see BLM
lands as places where coal mines and cattle can coexist
with canoeists and conservation projects.
``We're the public lands of the future, a place where
you can go get lost,'' Fry said. ``BLM is becoming the
open space agency.''
A prime example of the shift is Babbitt's choice of
the BLM to manage the Grand Staircase-Escalante National
Monument in southern Utah. President Clinton created the
national monument on 1.7 million acres of BLM land in
1996, blocking a proposed coal mine and angering Utah
officials and some area residents.
National monuments have many of the same land-use
restrictions as national parks, such as a ban on mining,
but can allow grazing and off-road vehicle use.
The administration also is considering broad swaths of
BLM land for increased restrictions from
designation as wilderness all the way up to declaration
of new national monuments. Those areas include Perry
Mesa, an area dotted with American Indian ruins near
Caniglia's ranch; Steens Mountain in southeastern Oregon;
the Shivwits Plateau north of the Grand Canyon; and an
area of canyons and Anasazi ruins in southwestern
Colorado.
Elsewhere, the BLM is becoming more aggressive in
enforcing environmental regulations, such as requiring
more stringent environmental reviews before re-issuing
grazing permits.
The changes don't sit well with many ranchers.
``There are many folks, they're just absolutely
overwhelmed and tired of dealing with the demands and the
requirements and feel like packing it in,'' said Paul
Frischknecht, who runs about 300 cattle and 6000 sheep on
100,000 BLM acres in central Utah.
``If I take my sheep out there and there are
restrictions on an animal control officer in applying his
trade to catch a bad, sheep-killing coyote, what's the
point? I might as well reduce my herds to what I can run
on the private land or go and buy a private land ranch.''
Some environmental activists, on the other hand, say
they're worried the BLM might not be up to the task of
becoming the Interior Department's newest conservation
and recreation agency.
One is Jim Baca, who quit as head of the BLM in 1994.
Baca, now mayor of Albuquerque, N.M., said most BLM
employees resisted his efforts to hike grazing fees and
strengthen environmental protections.
``They grew up in a culture that said that mining and
logging and livestock was the reason they were there, so
it was their job to make it very easy and inexpensive for
those extractive industries to operate,'' Baca said.
``It's not that they were evil, it's just that's what the
agency was supposed to do for so long.
``They all feel that they've got a job for life, they
all know there will be another director in a few years.
It almost means that the old guard has to retire before
things can change.''
Other environmental activists say that with strong
leadership from Washington, the BLM can do a good job of
preserving and rehabilitating its wide open spaces.
``There are a lot of Billy Bobs and Billy Joes in the
field offices who are so set in their ways. They are
going to do it the way they've always done it,'' said
Mike Matz, president of the Southern Utah Wilderness
Alliance. ``But with a system of rewards and positive
feedback and an emphasis on their shift in focus, I think
ultimately, yeah, the BLM could end up being an agency
that does a much more conscientious job of protecting the
environment, rather than laying it to waste.''
Fry said many old-guard employees have either left the
BLM or agree with the new focus.
``People who like to live and work on the land are
people who like to protect it,'' Fry said.
(Funny, that sounds an awful lot like the
definition of a rancher. So just who the Sam Hill is the
the "new" BLM "protecting" the land
from? Oh, of course in the case of the Escalante
Staircase Monument, they're protecting it from an
ultra-clean-burning coal mine that would compete with the
Asian monopoly enjoyed by Bill Clinton's illegal foreign
campaign bankrollers at the Lippo Group. How silly of us
to forget. Ed.)
Ranchers also have noticed a new breed of BLM worker.
``It used to be that a lot of rural people who were
raised with knowledge of these (grazing and mining)
functions were in those positions, and that's changing,''
Frischknecht said. ``There are a lot of people with an
urban background and students interested in these types
of positions getting their range conservation degree or
whatever it might be, and getting into the public
agencies.''
Fry and Babbitt say they believe changes in the
agency's focus are becoming permanent.
``I think they've become ingrained in the bureau and
also in the way of doing things in the West,'' Fry said.
``Our job is to make sure that the land, whatever the use
is, is the healthiest it can be, and to keep it for
future generations.''
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