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BLM’s Conservation and Landscape Health Rule: A Debate

  • Jonathan Wood
  • The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) is the nation’s largest public lands manager, with over 245 million acres under its control. As a result, changes to how the BLM manages its lands have a wide-reaching impact. Historically, public lands were managed with the goal of development. “Use-it-or-lose-it” laws required public lands leased by private actors to be ‘used’ for extractive purposes only, namely mining, oil and gas development, timber harvesting, and cattle grazing.

    Today, there is a growing interest in seeing conservation made a legally valid use of public lands, a concept PERC has researched and championed. Under the Biden administration, the BLM has implemented a new Conservation and Landscape Health rule which would open up leasing opportunities to conservationists and other groups for habitat restoration. This rule change has stirred both praise and criticism.

    In a thoughtful and lively debate hosted by The Federalist Society, PERC’s Vice President of Law and Policy Jonathan Wood makes the case for leasing federal land for conservation.

    Written By
    • Jonathan Wood
      • Vice President of Law & Policy

      Jonathan Wood is vice president of law and policy at PERC, leading PERC’s Conservation Law and Policy Center.

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