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In Colorado, A Range Of Reactions To Biden s Pick For The BLM
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Published: Friday, April 23, 2021
Tracy Stone-Manning Photo credit: AP Photo/Matt Gouras
Tracy Stone-Manning, whom President Biden will nominate as Bureau of Land Management director, with then-Gov.-elect Steve Bullock (D) in Helena, Mont., in December 2012. Stone-Manning ran the Montana Department of Environmental Quality under Bullock. AP Photo/Matt Gouras
Tracy Stone-Manning, President Biden s nominee to lead the Bureau of Land Management, has long been an advocate for conservation both inside and outside government but is willing to listen to all stakeholders on contentious issues like oil and gas development and wildlife protections, say those who have worked with her.
And like Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, who last month became the first Native American to lead the Interior Department, Stone-Manning s confirmation would be historic. She would become only the second woman to lead BLM in its 75-year history, joining Kathleen Clarke, who served as director from 2000-2006 in
Rolling Stone Menu The Battle for the Soul of Montana A copper mine threatens the iconic Smith River. It will bring jobs and the copper needed for a renewable-energy future, but is it worth the risk to one of the last pristine waterways?
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Geologist Jerry Zieg grew up next to the Smith River in central Montana, on the ranch his family has owned for five generations. The river irrigated their land. He learned to fish from its pristine bounty of westslope cutthroat trout. The river’s russet canyon walls, with 1,000-year-old pictographs drawn by the Besant and Avonlea peoples, were what first inspired his fascination with geology. Later, when he married his wife, the two floated the Smith for their honeymoon. “My family sold the part right on the river in the mid-Eighties, but I still have the rest of that land where I grew up on the Smith,” he says proudly.
alright man. start plucking! anthony: with one in the bag, we meet up with the rest of our party to cook and drink and eat. land tawney is a fifth generation montanan, and active conversationalist. hal herring is a journalist for field and stream magazine. the pheasant is cooked two ways; marinated in soy and fish sauce, sriracha, and lime browned in butter and buffaloed like chicken wings. or dredge it in flower and cajun seasonings, sautéed with garlic and brandy, then braised a bit with stock and wild mushrooms. collard greens and bacon as a side serve as a nice cleanse. anthony: man these greens are good! and the bird s delicious. oh yeah! man, an amazing day! dan bailey: eating it today. joe rogan: man, it was a beautiful day. anthony: why should people in new york or san francisco who ve never hunted in what way does your access to hunting ground impact on this nation in a positive way? why should they care? joe rogan: well, it s not hunting ground, it s public
montana rooster. good eating! anthony: alright man. start plucking! anthony: with one in the bag, we meet up with the rest of our party to cook and drink and eat. land tawney is a fifth generation montanan, and active conversationalist. hal herring is a journalist for field and stream magazine. the pheasant is cooked two ways; marinated in soy and fish sauce, sriracha, and lime browned in butter and buffaloed like chicken wings. or dredge it in flower and cajun seasonings, sautéed with garlic and brandy, then braised a bit with stock and wild mushrooms. collard greens and bacon as a side serve as a nice cleanse. anthony: man these greens are good! and the bird s delicious. oh yeah! man, an amazing day! dan bailey: eating it today. joe rogan: man, it was a beautiful day. anthony: why should people in new york or san francisco who ve never hunted in what way does your access to hunting ground
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