Stone-Manning sworn in as director of Bureau of Land Management

/ In The News, News

Tracy Stone-Manning, left, being sworn in Wednesday as Bureau of Land Management director by Interior Secretary Deb Haaland. Interior Department photo.

Statement from RTF: Stone-Manning’s tasks will be many in rebuilding a BLM that has lacked strong, steady leadership, including within a Wild Horse and Burro Program that needs transformative change, away from decades of removing and warehousing of wild horses and toward humane, on-the-range management. Return to Freedom hopes that Stone-Manning will bring a holistic view of public lands to the position and looks forward to working with her to create a sustainable future for wild horses, burros and other wildlife and the rangelands upon which they depend.

TAKE ACTION: Please join RTF in urging Stone-Manning to stop the wipeout of Wyoming’s wild horses.

As published by E&E News

Tracy Stone-Manning was ceremonially sworn in Wednesday as the first Senate-confirmed director of the Bureau of Land Management in nearly five years.

Interior Secretary Deb Haaland presided over the ceremony at Interior Department headquarters in Washington, D.C.

“Tracy brings a wealth of knowledge in conservation and environmental policy to these efforts and a history of working with diverse communities in service to our public lands,” Haaland said in a statement. “I look forward to working with her to strengthen the bureau and advance Interior’s mission.”

Stone-Manning, whom a deeply divided Senate confirmed as BLM director along party lines last month, has already been in place at BLM for several weeks.

She was officially sworn in as BLM director as of Oct. 12, according to a federal court filing by the Justice Department that added Stone-Manning as a defendant in Interior’s ongoing appeal of a court ruling last year that William Perry Pendley had illegally performed the duties of bureau director during the Trump administration.

Stone-Manning has already introduced herself as director to employees, telling them last week in an online staff meeting that she’s committed to rebuilding the agency after the Trump-era’s tumultuous move of BLM’s headquarters to Grand Junction, Colo.

The headquarters move out of Washington, D.C., as well as the associated relocation of hundreds of other positions to state offices across the West, resulted in 287 of the 328 staffers who were ordered to move leaving BLM, through either retirement or finding positions at other Interior agencies.

Haaland last month announced to employees that BLM’s national headquarters would be moved back to Washington, and the Grand Junction office would be rebranded as a Western hub.

BLM is the federal government’s largest landowner, overseeing about 245 million acres of surface lands and 700 million acres of subsurface mineral estate, mostly in the West. The agency has about 9,500 employees.

The last confirmed BLM director was Neil Kornze, who was approved in April 2014 by the Senate to serve in the Obama administration. Until Stone-Manning’s confirmation, BLM had been without a permanent director since Kornze left the bureau in January 2017.

Pendley essentially led BLM during the last 18 months of the Trump administration, but former President Trump withdrew his nomination to be director in the fall of 2020 after significant opposition from conservation groups and others.

Stone-Manning is also only the second woman to lead BLM in its 75-year history, joining Kathleen Clarke, who served as director from 2000 to 2006 in the George W. Bush administration.

“I am deeply honored to lead the Bureau of Land Management and carry out its critical mission to protect and manage America’s public lands,” Stone-Manning said in a statement following the ceremony.

“I recognize that there is work to be done to rebuild the BLM, and I look forward to connecting with the important stakeholders that rely on its strong management,” she added. “Our public lands are one of America’s finest ideas, and I am ready to get to work alongside a remarkable team to ensure our outdoor spaces are protected for current and future generations to enjoy.”