
Washington, DC – The Conservation Lands Foundation today condemned the White House Office of Management and Budget’s FY26 budget proposal for the Bureau of Land Management, which delivers devastating cuts that would cripple the agency's ability to steward America's public lands and fulfill its legal mandates.
Below is a statement from Chris Hill, CEO of Conservation Lands Foundation:
“The White House’s FY26 Bureau of Land Management budget blueprint is the latest assault in this administration's relentless campaign to dismantle public lands and gut the agencies that protect them. By cutting the Lands and Resources account by more than $460 million and slashing the National Monuments and National Conservation Areas account by 72.%, the administration is making it clear that it does not value these irreplaceable public lands and waters, the communities and rural economies that depend on them, the wildlife that calls them home, or their essential role in our climate future. Instead, the White House would rather gut vital programs like the National Conservation Lands to fund tax breaks for billionaires.
“The Bureau of Land Management oversees more public land than any other federal agency—245 million acres across the American West—yet has been chronically underfunded and understaffed by Congress for decades. A well-funded BLM is essential to preserving outdoor recreation and public access, supporting rural economies, and safeguarding local watersheds and wildlife, but has been historically underfunded and understaffed.
“Now the White House is slashing the National Conservation Lands system to just $15 million - $16.3 million less than the lowest amount Congress has provided in the program's history ($31.301 in FY2010). Since then, the National Conservation Lands system has grown by more than 12 million acres through acts of Congress and Antiquities Act proclamations by presidents of both parties. These staggering budget cuts mean closed trails and visitor centers, damaged wildlife habitats, and forsaken conservation commitments that span generations of bipartisan leadership.
“This budget blueprint follows Interior Secretary Doug Burgum's testimony last month before the House and Senate Interior Appropriations Subcommittees, which revealed an administration more interested in extracting short-term profits than protecting our lands, water, wildlife and the public’s access to the outdoors. Despite carefully crafted rhetoric about 'responsible resource management,' the Secretary’s actions tell a different story: this administration prioritizes corporate interests ahead of the American people and future generations.
“While we recognize the need to balance the use of public lands with responsible energy development and production of domestic critical minerals, we believe in the longstanding, bipartisan tradition that all activities on public lands must respect outdoor recreation access, environmental laws, the rights and traditions of Indigenous people, and the long-term preservation of the land and essential wildlife habitats that are part of the natural and national legacy that belongs to all of us.
“We’re encouraged that lawmakers from both parties support keeping America’s public lands in public hands and we commend Rep. Mike Simpson (R-Idaho), Rep. Chellie Pingree (D-Maine), Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-New Mexico), Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Oregon), and Sen. Patty Murray (D-Washington) for their statements opposing public land sell-offs in the recent budget hearings. Since the White House refuses to provide the BLM with the resources necessary for the agency to fulfill its responsibilities under the Federal Land Policy and Management Act, Congress must take the lead where the administration has fallen short.
“We’re grateful to America’s public lands champions in Congress, including Sen. Jacky Rosen (D-Nevada) and Rep. Dina Titus (D-Nevada), who led letters in the Senate and House of Representatives, respectively, and their 33 colleagues who signed their letters urging appropriators to reject the White House budget request and provide robust funding for the BLM and National Conservation Lands in FY2026.
“We call on Congress to reject the administration’s proposal that shortchanges effective stewardship of America’s public lands. Congress must also scrutinize this administration's continued wasteful spending on legally questionable efforts to weaken national monument protections. We will hold Secretary Burgum to his commitment—made to Senator Heinrich—that no monument boundaries will be altered without meaningful local consultation.
“America's public lands belong to all of us. Full Stop. Congress has the opportunity—and the responsibility—to ensure these treasures remain protected for current and future generations.”
###

Leave a comment
1 reaction
-
Conservation Lands Foundation published this page in Latest News 2025-06-02 14:30:31 -0600