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Biden Nominated Deb Haaland to Lead the Department of the Interior. Here Are Five Top Priorities for the Agency.

Update: On March 15, 2021, the Senate voted to confirm Deb Haaland as Secretary of Interior.

President-elect Joe Biden tapped Deb Haaland to head up the U.S. Department of the Interior, which oversees our nation's public lands, wildlife conservation, and key aspects of energy development. Currently a House representative from New Mexico, Haaland has led the national parks, forests, and public lands subcommittee on the House Natural Resources Committee. She would be the first Native American to lead the department.

If confirmed, Haaland will oversee an agency the Trump administration systematically worked to dismantle. Secretaries Ryan Zinke and David Bernhardt did everything in their power to make the department as industry friendly as possible — shrinking national monuments, gutting endangered species protections, throwing open the doors to fossil fuel extraction, and more.

Though Haaland will face significant challenges, she can begin to reverse harmful policies and ensure our public lands are conserved and used in ways that benefit us all.

Here are five priorities Haaland and the department should act on right away:

  1. Restore curbs on methane waste. Methane is a potent pollutant that accelerates climate change. Wasteful practices like “flaring” burn off excess methane from oil and gas wells. Flaring also threatens public health because it releases cancer-causing toxins into the air. Low-wealth individuals and people of color, who are more likely to live near oil and gas wells, are at especially high risk. To protect public and environmental health, the department should a) settle lawsuits challenging the Trump administration’s removal of curbs on methane waste, b) restore the Obama-era protections that Trump repealed, and c) reduce methane pollution on public lands.

  2. Restore Arctic National Wildlife Refuge protections. President Trump is racing against the clock to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, the largest national wildlife refuge in the country, to oil and gas drilling. This fragile landscape is home to cherished wildlife, such as polar bears, moose, caribou, wolves, and eagles; a fossil fuel spill would put these species in catastrophic danger and be nearly impossible to clean up. Haaland should restore all refuge protections rolled back by the Trump administration and explore rescinding Trump-approved oil and gas leases there.

  3. Restart climate adaptation planning. To mitigate the worst effects of climate change, we must draft and implement climate adaption plans on our public lands. Protecting wild and scenic places, historic landmarks, and threatened and endangered species from sea-level rise, flooding, wildfires, and other climate impacts must once again be at the center of Interior's mission, as it was before Trump took office. Making it so will pay other dividends, too, such as safeguarding public health and nearby communities.

  4. Restrict leases that permit offshore drilling for oil and gas in all coastal states. Early in the Trump administration, Zinke proposed a dangerous plan to open almost all U.S. coastal areas to oil and gas drilling. Undeterred by disasters like the BP/Deepwater Horizon oil spill, the administration was moving full steam ahead until several coastal state governors pushed back. The administration curtailed leasing, but only in states with governors allied with Trump. Biden and Haaland should take a more prudent approach and restrict fossil fuel leases in all coastal areas. Doing so would safeguard vital marine and coastal ecosystems and protect shoreline communities from toxic spills and other disasters.

  5. Require offsets for environmental harms on our public lands. Millions of acres on our federal public lands are open to activities like grazing, mining, hiking, and camping. When these activities degrade or pollute these lands, Interior should require responsible parties to completely offset damage with environmental restoration projects and other efforts; curtail uses of public lands that generate carbon pollution; and advance the federal government's efforts to combat climate change.

These recommendations barely scratch the surface, but they're an important place to start. Additional priorities include implementing a new federal land conservation law and executing the Land and Water Conservation Fund at the federal level. Haaland should also revoke the department’s recent decision to give states unprecedented veto power over federal recreational land acquisitions.

Trump’s Interior Department violated its obligations as a trustee of the nation’s public lands and resources. Haaland can begin to repair the damage and restore the federal government’s commitment to mitigate and adapt to climate change. She can also get started on preserving our public lands and resources to ensure their continued enjoyment. Doing so will restore policies that are consistent with the rule of law and that benefit the American people, the communities in which they live, and our precious natural heritage.

Editor’s note: This post is part of the Center for Progressive Reform’s Policy for a Just America initiative. Learn more on CPR's website.

Top image by the Office of Rep. Deb Haaland.

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Robert L. Glicksman | December 17, 2020

Biden Nominated Deb Haaland to Lead the Department of the Interior. Here Are Five Top Priorities for the Agency.

President-elect Joe Biden tapped Deb Haaland to head up the U.S. Department of the Interior, which oversees our nation's public lands, wildlife conservation, and key aspects of energy development. Currently a House representative from New Mexico, Haaland has led the national parks, forests, and public lands subcommittee on the House Natural Resources Committee. She would be the first Native American to lead the department.

Robert Verchick | December 17, 2020

Biden Plans to Pick Brenda Mallory to Lead the White House Council on Environmental Quality. Here’s What She Can Do to Boost Public Protections.

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Daniel Farber | December 15, 2020

Restoring Agency Norms

Donald Trump prided himself on his contempt for established norms of presidential action. Whole books have been written about how to restore those norms. Something similar also happened deeper down in the government, out in the agencies like the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that do the actual work of governance. Trump appointees have corrupted agencies and trashed the norms that support agency integrity. It will take hard work to undo the harm. White House leadership is important, but success will require dedicated effort by the agency heads appointed by Biden.

Scott Stern | December 14, 2020

A New Strategy for Indigenous Climate Refugees

In the midst of a global pandemic and increasingly desperate attempts by the Trump administration to subvert the results of the 2020 election, it would be easy to miss a slew of recent news stories on individuals the media has termed "climate refugees." These are people who have been displaced due to catastrophic climate change, or who will be forced to flee as their homes become too hot, too cold, or too dry, or if they become regular targets of massive storms or end up underwater. As many of these stories have highlighted, among those most at risk are the Indigenous peoples of the United States. Yet, there is a potential path out of climate-induced devastation.

Daniel Farber | December 11, 2020

Downstream Emissions

A recent Ninth Circuit ruling overturned approval of offshore drilling in the Arctic. The ruling may directly impact the Trump administration's plans for oil leasing in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR). By requiring agencies to consider emissions when fossil fuels are ultimately burned, the Court of Appeals' decision may also change the way agencies consider other fossil fuel projects, such as gas pipelines.

Katlyn Schmitt | December 10, 2020

Environmental Enforcement in the COVID-19 Era

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Darya Minovi, Rebecca Bratspies | December 9, 2020

Will the Biden Administration Invest in Environmental Justice Reforms?

On October 22, millions of Americans watched the final presidential debate, taking in each candidate's plan for oft-discussed issues like health care, the economy, and foreign policy. Toward the end, the moderator asked the candidates how they would address the disproportionate and harmful impacts of the oil and chemical industries on people of color. President Trump largely ignored the question. But former Vice President Joe Biden addressed it head on, sharing his own experience growing up near oil refineries and calling for restrictions on "fenceline emissions" -- the pollution levels observed at the boundary of a facility's property, which too often abuts a residential neighborhood. Less than three weeks later, Biden was elected president of the United States, making it possible for him to turn his campaign promises into action.

Laurie Ristino | December 8, 2020

Democracy Is Fragile. Help Us Protect It.

At long last, we’ve reached “safe harbor” day, when states must resolve election-related disputes. Under federal law, Congress must count votes from states that meet today’s deadline. Donald Trump is essentially out of time to steal a second term; our democracy, it appears, will survive, at least for now. The last four years have been an urgent call to action to reclaim our democracy, to fix it, to reimagine it. The good news is we can use the tools of democracy to do so. The Center for Progressive Reform is launching Policy for a Just America, a major new initiative to repair and reimagine government. We’re developing a series of policy recommendations and other resources to advance justice and equity and create a sustainable future. We’re also using advocacy and media engagement tools to inform the public about the urgent need for reform and how to achieve it across all levels of government.

William Funk | December 7, 2020

HHS Proposes to Sunset Regulations It Fails to Review Retrospectively

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