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The BLM is exploring two new revised plans, both would close a much larger proportion of land in Western Colorado to oil and gas leasing than its originally approved plan, set to go into effect in 2024. The BLM is seeking feedback from the public through public meetings and its website.
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The Bureau of Land Management moved its headquarters to Grand Junction on Thursday. Demonstrators were there, in part to protest acting department…
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The Trump administration's plan to move the government's largest land management office from Washington to Colorado evoked a mix of praise, criticism and…
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The City of Glenwood Springs is appealing to federal agencies and state politicians to prevent the expansion of a nearby limestone mine. In a press…
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Hundreds of thousands of federal employees returned to work on Monday after the longest government shutdown in U.S. history. Most hadn’t worked in 35…
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Some federal workers are still working in Colorado, despite the government shutdown. The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) is still overseeing oil and gas…
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Earlier this month, a federal judge ruled that the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) needs to further analyze climate impacts as it plans for future use of…
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A decade-long battle over oil and gas leases in the Thompson Divide area near Carbondale has ended. After an environmental review in 2016, the Bureau of…
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The federal government has reached a settlement in an ongoing legal battle over drilling in the Thompson Divide area of the White River National Forest.…
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Colorado’s senators say Grand Junction is the ideal spot for Bureau of Land Management headquarters, and they’re urging the Secretary of the Interior to…