Finally! Utah State Bureau of Land Management (BLM) Director and Bush
administration holdover, Selma Sierra, has been “reassigned” to head the BLM’s
Eastern States office. This announcement has been a long time coming and is a
welcome one to supporters of America’s Red Rock
Wilderness Act.
During her tenure in Utah, Sierra effectively
carried out the Bush administration’s mission to prioritize oil and gas
development and off-road vehicle use over all other uses of the public lands.
Her most damning legacy is the completion of six unbalanced
resource management plans and off-road vehicle travel plans. These plans,
rushed to completion in late 2008, attempted to cement the Bush legacy for
decades to come. Sierra was also responsible for the Utah BLM’s
‘Christmas/We’re Going Out of Business’ oil and gas lease
sale in December 2008. This sale drew nationwide attention and rebuke for
its attempt to auction off leases on the doorstep of national parks and amazing
wilderness and culturally significant areas, over the objections of the National
Park Service and others. The upside of that debacle is that agency reports
following the sale provided the foundation for Secretary Salazar’s onshore oil
and gas leasing reforms that—if implemented—will provide a more balanced
approach to how the agency sells leases.
Replacing Sierra is Juan
Palma, a land manager hailing from Nevada and Oregon. Palma has served as field
office manager of BLM’s Las Vegas and Vale, Oregon, offices, as well as
executive director of the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency. Most recently, Palma
served as the BLM’s Eastern States Director. He also attended Brigham Young
University and has family in Utah.
We look forward to meeting and
working with Palma to tackle some of the state’s most pressing public land
issues, including: reigning in off-road vehicle use, actively addressing climate
change and, most broadly, bringing balance back to how public lands are managed
in Utah. This is a tall order but the lands that we are working to protect
demand no less than a full court press throughout Palma’s tenure.
We’ll
keep you posted on our progress.
Sincerely,
Steve
Bloch
Attorney
Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance
Wow. Almost a decade in development and you call it rushed. You people won't be happy until you get control over everything.
Posted by: Deek | 07/09/2010 at 04:33 PM
Good "riddance" would have been even more appropriate. No one is trying to control anything. Selma Sierra ranks high on the list as one of the office's worst directors ever, and that is a distinguished list. Consistent with the mandates she was carrying out, energy policies were continually favored and environmental protections and proper natural resource staffing not properly addressed. She was a blockade to balance. And, yes, the RMP's were rushed. I remained in disbelief that she continued for as long as she did here under a new administration. I am worried about Palma; his past connection with Kathleen Clarke is not a good sign.
Posted by: Tony | 07/09/2010 at 07:25 PM