Congressional delegation takes steps to reverse BLM plan
Submitted Photo Congresswoman Julie Fedorchak, left, and Sen. John Hoeven, right, join President Donald Trump, who holds up the signed resolution that will repeal the Biden-era Bureau of Land Management’s Resource Management Plan for North Dakota. Photo from Congresswoman Julie Fedorchak’s office.
WASHINGTON – Congresswoman Julie Fedorchak and U.S. Sen. John Hoeven, both R-ND, were on hand recently during President Donald Trump’s signing of a resolution to unwind the Biden-era Bureau of Land Management’s Resource Management Plan (RMP) for the state.
Fedorchak introduced the resolution in the U.S. House of Representatives. and Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-ND, introduced the companion legislation in the Senate, to which Hoeven signed on. The resolution initiates the process for BLM to replace the RMP while preventing the government from issuing a substantially similar plan in the future.
“This signing was historic. It reinforces the multiple use mandate the Biden Bureau of Land Management blatantly ignored,” Cramer said. “Multiple use means multiple use. It doesn’t mean single use. It doesn’t mean a withdrawal of lands from use at all. It means multiple use. Our landowners, our energy producers, our ranchers, our farmers, really everyone who uses public lands understands this and they can celebrate now knowing the plan has been thrown out.”
“I’m looking forward to the Trump administration writing a new one that respects the mandate that Congress gives it,” Cramer added.
He credited Fedorchak as a freshman House member for taking the lead as a member of the Energy and Commerce Committee.
“The Biden administration failed to recognize North Dakota’s record of responsible energy development and environmental stewardship when developing its resource management plan for our state,” Fedorchak said. “If not reversed, this plan would have crushed coal production and eliminated 12,000 jobs in our state.”
The bill passed the House in September in a 215-211 vote. In October, it passed the Senate in a 50-45 vote.
The Federal Land Policy and Management Act instructs the BLM’s management of public lands. RMPs are the plans outlining the agency’s management of its acreage within individual areas. In North Dakota, the BLM is the landlord of 58,500 surface acres and 4.1 million acres of mineral estate.
The Biden administration RMP prohibited coal leasing on over four million acres, or nearly 99% of federal coal acreage in the state, according to information from Cramer’s office. It also blocked 213,000 acres, or 44%, of federally owned fluid mineral acreage. Economic data provided by the State of North Dakota estimated the state would have been deprived of $34 million annually in oil and gas royalties and tax revenue if the plan had been implemented.
Cramer led the delegation in securing an opinion from the Government Accountability Office affirming the RMP qualified as a rule for a repeal resolution. Fedorchak and Cramer then introduced the joint resolution.






