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Michigan lawmakers target predatory loan companies; NY jury hears tape of Trump and Cohen Discussing Hush-Money Deal; flood-impacted VT households rebuild for climate resilience; film documents environmental battle with Colorado oil, gas industry.

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President Biden defends dissent but says "order must prevail" on campus, former President Trump won't commit to accepting the 2024 election results and Nebraska lawmakers circumvent a ballot measure repealing private school vouchers.

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Bidding begins soon for Wyoming's elk antlers, Southeastern states gained population in the past year, small rural energy projects are losing out to bigger proposals, and a rural arts cooperative is filling the gap for schools in Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

Critics: BLM Sage-Grouse Plans Influenced by Oil and Gas Firms

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Tuesday, November 28, 2017   

Correction: Jayson O'Neill is with the Western Values Project.

SALT LAKE CITY – As the deadline for public comments on the BLM's decision to consider modifying sage grouse habitat management plans draws near, a conservation watchdog group has identified ten oil and gas companies that stand to directly benefit.

Jayson O'Neill, the deputy director of the Western Values Project, says half the companies that could see relaxed drilling rules on existing leases are members of the Western Energy Alliance, including Anadarko and Exxon Mobil.

"And they're directly related to the lobby group that has actively pursued these wholesale changes to sage-grouse management plans and the habitat in which they live," he notes.

More than six million acres of oil and gas leases in sage-grouse habitat are currently designated with heightened protections. O'Neill says the BLM's proposed changes are essentially a carbon copy of requests made in a leaked WEA letter to the Department of Interior. A spokesperson for the Interior Department said a number of stakeholders, including representatives from sage-grouse states across party lines, had an opportunity to weigh in on the agency's decision.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service decided not to list the greater sage grouse as an endangered species, even though the bird's population has declined by nearly 95 percent from historic numbers.

O'Neill says if the BLM removes protections, decades of work from stakeholders across eleven western states could be lost. He believes the current land-management plans should be given a chance to work.

"And that benefits not only industry, to give them predictability, but it also gave public land users an opportunity to use those lands as well and not risk what would be devastating to these rural economies - a sage grouse endangered-species listing," he adds.

O'Neill says an official listing could put the viability of ranching, outdoor recreation, energy development and other uses on some 50 million acres across the West in question. The open comment period on habitat plans ends this Friday, December 1.


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