Interior nominee opposes Bush
plan to sell public land: Kempthorne explains his position on
parks, species act, ethics
(Note: If Dirk Kempthorne has the courage to stand behind
his words, he will be a breath of fresh air, not only in the
Department of the Interior, but also within the Beltway.
Federal land -- it is not "public" if it is
padlocked/closed to the public -- should be utilized for
more than "habitat" for species that flourish on
privately-owned lands. PropertyRightsResearch.org has much on
these topics; see the DOI and ESA buttons, for starters.)
May 5, 2006
By Noelle Straub [email protected]
Billings Gazette, Washington Bureau
The Billings Gazette
Billings, Montana
http://www.billingsgazette.com
To submit a Letter to the Editor: [email protected]
Washington, D.C. - Interior secretary nominee Dirk
Kempthorne at his Senate confirmation hearing Thursday came
out against two Bush administration proposals to sell off
thousands of acres of public land to pay down the deficit and
to fund a rural schools program.
"I do not favor that," Kempthorne told Western
senators who asked about a proposal in President Bush's 2007
budget that would sell Bureau of Land Management property
worth $250 million over five years and use the proceeds to
reduce the debt.
"If it is specific and strictly for deficit reduction, I
do not agree with that," he said. "That would be my
position. That would be what I would advocate, if confirmed,
in those meetings discussing how we resolve this budget
deficit that is facing the country."
Asked after the hearing whether the Bush administration had
given up on its proposal to sell lands to reduce the deficit,
Kempthorne said he could not say that.
"What I expressed is my views," he said. "I
expressed the position I will take in those discussions about
the budget. I do not favor the concept of selling public lands
for deficit reduction."
Kempthorne also said he would work to find a way other than
selling off national forestland to fund payments over five
years to counties under the Rural Schools and Community
Self-Determination Act.
The Bush administration had proposed selling up to $800
million of forest, including 13,948 acres in Montana and
17,619 acres in Wyoming, to fund the act.
After the hearing, Kempthorne told reporters he would work
with the act's original sponsors, Sens. Larry Craig, R-Idaho,
and Ron Wyden, D-Ore., to find another source of funds.
"What I would like to do there is work with Sen. Craig
and Sen. Wyden and see where we can we find offsets to that,
because it's a very important program," he said.
Craig said the administration has "read the tea
leaves" on the issue and that the proposal "is not
going to happen."
Kempthorne said he would not rule out selling federal lands in
the future, because there are "situations where the sale
of public land is appropriate."
Energy issues
During the 3Ѕ-hour hearing before the Senate Energy and
Natural Resources Committee, the Idaho governor and former
senator also said he would look for ways to revamp the
Endangered Species Act, move more quickly to process drilling
permits, and address national park issues.
The Senate committee will vote on Kempthorne's nomination on
Wednesday, and then the full Senate is expected to confirm
him.
Sen. Craig Thomas, R-Wyo., noted the importance of energy
production on public lands in the West and asked whether the
application process could move more quickly.
Kempthorne responded that he could not speak to the
particulars of how Interior handles applications. But as
governor, he said, he created the state's Department of
Environmental Quality, which moved outstanding permits toward
completion.
"I would be happy to look at that with that attitude,
that we should move as expeditiously as is appropriate, and
that's both in the approval and also for the denial, not
judging what the outcome would be," he said.
Kempthorne favors expansion of domestic oil and gas drilling
on public lands, saying the U.S. should produce its own energy
supply to the extent it can to reduce dependence on imports.
But he said drilling for oil and gas can be done in an
environmentally sensitive way.
"Economic vitality and a positive environment, they're
not mutually exclusive," he said.
He said he would address low royalty payments to the
government despite high energy prices. "I believe that
any leases that go forward need to have a price threshold so
that if in fact those prices go up, then there should not be
the royalty relief," Kempthorne said.
Species act, parks, ethics
Thomas asked whether administration of the Endangered Species
Act could be streamlined. While a senator, Kempthorne was part
of a bipartisan group that passed reform of the act through
the committee, but it did not pass the full Senate.
"If confirmed, I would welcome the opportunity to look at
both the regulations side but also what perhaps could be done
legislatively," Kempthorne said.
On national park issues, Kempthorne said he would be willing
to delve into the proposed rewrite of park management policy
that has sparked great controversy. "If confirmed, yes, I
will look forward to reviewing those proposed changes in
management policies," he said.
Asked why the policies had been rewritten earlier than
expected, Kempthorne said the procedures predated the Sept.
11, 2001, attacks and so must take into account homeland
security. He said they also did not address information
technology or employee management.
"Any organization from time to time needs to be
introspective and see where to make improvements," he
said.
Wyden asked Kempthorne to address the Jack Abramoff lobbying
scandal and how it affected the Interior Department. Steven
Griles, who served as the deputy secretary from 2001 to 2005,
had many contacts with Abramoff's staff about the lobbyist's
tribal clients.
"Jack Abramoff used the Interior Department to perpetrate
one of the biggest scandals in recent history," Wyden
said, adding that Griles "had the run of Interior."
Wyden said the department's inspector general has described
Griles' service at Interior as an "ethical quagmire"
and that the agency's ethics program is a "wholesale
failure."
"It's going to be important for you to go in there and
drain the swamp," Wyden said.
Kempthorne responded that one of first briefings he received
was with the ethics office, and he plans to give the
department's inspector general a key role in department
management.
"If confirmed, the first day I'm secretary of interior I
will also be sitting down with the office of ethics and will
also discuss the topic of ethics with the employees of the
Department of Interior," he said.
Kempthorne said he may have to recuse himself for one year
from being personally involved with issues he dealt with as
Idaho governor, possibly including wolf and grizzly bear
issues.
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