CLF Calls on Congress to Keep Public Lands Sell-Off and Western Arctic Amendments Out of Budget Reconciliation Bill

Washington, DC - Yesterday, Senator Mike Lee (R-Utah) introduced text for the Senate amendment to the One Big Beautiful Act requiring the sale of up to 1.8 million acres of Bureau of Land Management public lands managed by the federal government for the benefit of the American people, reviving a failed effort that was stripped out of the bill before it passed the House. The amendment also adds Western Arctic drilling provisions back into the budget reconciliation package that were previously removed in the House version.
The House provision on public lands sales would have mandated the sale of millions of acres of public lands in Utah and Nevada to the highest bidder. Senator Lee’s new amendment would expand that mandate to millions of acres across nine Western states, puts units of the National Conservation Lands at risk, and provides no requirement for public hearings on the disposal of these lands.
The Western Arctic drilling provisions would require six lease sales over the next ten years and eliminate the Biden administration’s regulations that safeguard the livelihood of Indigenous people and critical wildlife habitat in America’s largest remaining piece of intact public land.
Below is a statement from Chris Hill, CEO of the Conservation Lands Foundation, which represents a national network of community advocates who are solely focused on the public lands overseen by the Bureau of Land Management including the 38 million acres of National Conservation Lands.
“Selling off public lands will not benefit the people of Utah, Alaska or any other state, but it will benefit billionaires who seek to profit from these priceless lands and waters.
“America’s public lands are integral to the fabric of our nation: protecting them for the benefit of all Americans is in the national interest. When we continue to protect public lands, we continue to support the multi-faceted benefits that public lands bring to everyone: access to hunting and fishing, camping and hiking and the ability to enjoy unspoiled wilderness and natural areas that belong to all of us.
“Allowing development in the country’s largest remaining piece of intact public land, which is in the Western Arctic and which supports the livelihood of Indigenous people as well as critical wildlife habitats, is a shortsighted action that silences the voices of the Alaska Native communities and disregards the overwhelming public support for its protection – support that included over two hundred and fifty thousand comments.
“Watching rogue politicians try to destroy America’s system of public lands protection is like watching the movie “Groundhog Day”. They keep trying to sell off America’s natural resources to oil and gas companies and people from all across America keep stopping them. We must remind the rest of Congress once again that support for public lands is both robust, bipartisan and common sense.
“Senator Lee’s latest amendment must be rejected to send a strong and lasting signal that America’s public lands are not for sale. We call on Congress to act on behalf of the rights of all Americans to enjoy and have access to public lands by rejecting these appalling attempts to mandate the sale of millions of acres of public land and line the pockets of campaign donors and out-of-state special interests. Public lands must remain in public hands for everyone to enjoy, not just the greedy few.”














