Feds officially cancel conservation rule for public lands
The United States Bureau of Land Management on Monday formally cancelled the so-called Public Land Rule, which required the agency to consider conservation and development equally in land-use decisions for millions of acres across the West.
The BLM published a notice Monday in the Federal Register finalizing its elimination of the 2024 rule, officially known as the Conservation and Landscape Health Rule. The agency first announced it was considering eliminating the rule in September.
The Biden-era rule provided guidance for ensuring conservation received due consideration along with mining, timber, grazing, recreation or other uses on public lands. It also allowed the BLM to issue leases specifically for conservation, though the agency never issued any.
The BLMs notice Monday said officials had received and responded to nearly 140,000 public comments in response to the proposal. Ultimately, officials said eliminating the 2024 rule was necessary because it threatened to restrict productive use of the public lands and introduced uncertainty and unnecessary burdens in planning and permitting. The rules elimination comes alongside executive orders and other actions by the Trump administration to expand drilling, mineral production and other commercial uses of public lands.
https://washingtonstatestandard.com/briefs/feds-officially-cancel-conservation-rule-for-public-lands/