Once again, time to keep public lands public

Restart your worry engines over the possible shrinkage of the U.S. public lands. Actually, do more than that. Get involved. March, donate, protest, whatever you can to stop the shrinkage, misuse and polluting of public lands from the next U.S. administration.

That has not been at the top of the Humpty-Trumpty agenda, and it might seem a minor thing in the coming LONG four years, given that Donny only appointed a minor oligarch to run the Department of Interior. Doug Burgum may not have plans to shrink, misuse or pollute public lands, but read what NPR (November 14, 2024) says his boss has in mind:

“If confirmed as Interior Secretary, Burgum would play a key role in pushing Trump’s agenda to increase oil, gas and coal production on public lands.

“Interior is a sprawling department responsible for managing 20% of U.S. surface land, as well as federally owned mineral rights. This gives Interior control over nearly a quarter of all energy development in America, on- and off-shore. . .

“Interior is also in charge of U.S. national parks, monuments and wildlife refuges. . .

“Restoring and expanding fossil fuel energy development should be priority one at Interior in the coming Trump term, former Interior official William Perry Pendley wrote in Project 2025, a blueprint for the new administration published by the Heritage Foundation.”

In 2016, the last time this worry was before me, I made a trip to the Bears Ears Monument in Utah before Dondi shrunk it to postage-stamp size. Right now, it is back to 1.36 million acres of public lands, thanks to action that President Biden took on his first day in office. If history repeats itself, Bears Ears could shrink again by 85 percent as it did in the last Lost Ages.

We missed Bears Ears in our 2024 trip to Utah, Arizona and Colorado, but saw other recreational lands that could be on the Burgum diet. But not if those who enjoy the nation’s public lands do more than worry and take action.