On January 7, Rep. RaĂșl Grijalva (D-Arizona), the new chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee, sent a pointed letter to David Bernhardt, the acting secretary of the Department of the Interior. Grijalva wanted to know why the departmentâs Bureau of Land Management (BLM) was moving ahead with public meetings on plans for oil and gas leasing in Alaskaâs Arctic National Wildlife Refuge despite a partial government shutdown that had furloughed thousands of Interior employees and halted other operations. The meetings should be delayed, ; holding them during a shutdown âgives the strong impression that BLM is simply trying to check the boxes and end the comment periods as soon as possible.â
Two days later, BLM announced . Huh. This was something new.
Itâs not clear if Grijalvaâs note drove BLMâs decision, but getting his way was a welcome change for the nine-term congressman from Arizona. Grijalva says he sent Interior seeking explanations for the departmentâs policies under Ryan Zinke, the former secretary who became the target of multiple ethics probes and resigned in December.
Grijalva, the committeeâs ranking Democrat since 2014, has watched in frustration as the Trump administration barrels ahead toward its stated goal of energy dominance. In December, for example, BLM issued plans that would lift restrictions on oil and gas development in some nine million acres of Greater Sage-Grouse habitat on federal lands that had been protected under a 2015 compromise to keep the birds from being listed under the Endangered Species Act. Interior is also moving quickly to facilitate drilling in the Arctic Refuge and expand energy development in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, along with taking a decidedly industry-friendly approach to enforcing the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA).
Under previous chair Rep. Rob Bishop (R-Utah), the committeeâwhich oversees federal lands, wildlife, oil and gas, mining, tribal issues, and oceansâwas sympathetic to the administrationâs agenda. Industry representatives made up nearly a third of the witnesses invited to give testimony before the committee in 2017 and 2018, according to . Energy companiesâespecially fossil fuel interestsâwere invited most often.
But now Grijalva holds the gavel. He can issue subpoenas and hold oversight hearings, and says he to testify before the committee. He decides which legislation the panel will consider. And although the bills he sends to the Democrat-controlled House will face long odds with both the Senate and White House in Republican hands, the next two years are an opportunity to get them teed up for passage should his party take control in 2020.
In an interview about his plans as chairman, Grijalva, 70, tells ĂÛèÖAPP that ĂÛèÖAPP change will be the focus of major hearings and the lens through which his committee views nearly every issue. âBuilding ĂÛèÖAPP resilience and finding ways to stretch our limited water suppliesâthose are going to be a priority,â he says. âWeâre going to accept ĂÛèÖAPP change as a factâand scienceâand not spend any time going through denial or avoidance on the issue.â
A second emphasis of Grijalvaâs chairmanship will be investigating industryâs influence at Interior and passing bills that steer the department toward what he describes as a more balanced mission that recognizes the many uses of public lands, not just their commercial value. âItâs systemic, that culture that has been put into Interior up and down the line, and I think thatâs what we want to get at,â he says. âWeâre going to have legislative fixes for some of these rollbacks.â
Some of those proposals will have major implications for birds and other wildlife. The administrationâs efforts to weaken the MBTA, for instance, will be the focus of committee hearings and possible legislation, Grijalva says. Interior drew rebukes and legal challenges from the ĂÛèÖAPP and others when it announced in 2017 that it was changing its interpretation of the MBTA and would no longer penalize the unintentional killing of birdsâknown as âincidental takeââby energy companies and others. The department is expected to firm up that position soon through a formal rulemaking process, but Grijalva might try to head it off with a bill to enforce incidental take.
And while Grijalva thought the 2015 compromise on sage-grouse management was too easy on the fossil fuel industry, ânevertheless, thatâs the thing in place,â he says. âNow to try to undo that is a different issue. Weâre going to fight that very hard and try to work out legislatively how to protect that.â
Conservation groups see a proven ally in the new chairman. âIf you look at his legislative priorities, both on the proactive side and bad bills he tried to fix or make sure didnât go through, heâs been a tireless advocate for conservation and public lands,â says Aaron Weiss, deputy director of the Center for Western Priorities.
As an example, Weiss notes that Grijalva sponsored a 2009 bill that established the within BLM. âThat really marked a turning point in terms of thinking about BLM land as not just the âBureau of Leasing and Mining,â as itâs sometimes called, but recognizing that BLM plays a crucial role in preserving Americaâs public lands and not just leasing them out,â Weiss says.
But under President Trump, critics say, the agency has embodied that disparaging nickname. The BLM might have delayed public meetings on the Arctic Refuge, but thatâs just a speed bump on its fast track to more drilling on Alaskaâs North Slope. âThe Arctic to me is one of the priorities,â Grijalva says. âOur point is to try, legislatively and otherwise, to interject ourselves into that process.â
Grijalva says heâll also investigate the administrationâs controversial decision to cut roughly two million acres from the Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante national monuments, potentially opening those tracts to energy development and logging. âWe want to know why, who profits, what happened to the science,â he says. âIs it that are also the drivers here?"
While he anticipates accusations from some Republicans that he's launching political attacks on the Trump administration, Grijalva says he simply wants to fulfill the committeeâs responsibility as a check on the executive branch. âIf we approach it professionally, fact-based, I think the American public are going to understand that weâre just doing our job and that they deserve to know whatâs going on,â he says. âEverything that weâre going to be examining from a position of majority, we asked for information from the position of minority and were ignored. Weâre not inventing this. We werenât waiting for this opportunity to serve revenge cold. This is the process.â
Grijalva became active in environmental issues in the 1990s, when he joined residents rallying for cleanup of groundwater contamination in Tucson. But he says his roots as a conservationist where he spent his early childhood. âThe bird life around where I grew up was unbelievable,â he says. âIt was near the Santa Rita Mountains. There was a lake there and you could see the migrations come and see whoâs leaving.â (Now preserved as the RaĂșl M. Grijalva Canoa Ranch Conservation Park, the site is .)
As the son of a cowboy who emigrated from Mexico and the representative for a district with 300 miles of border, Grijalva is vehemently opposed to President Trumpâs proposed wall. He to highlight the serious impacts scientists say the wall would have on his home regionâs landscape and wildlife. âThereâs no secret that every one of us that represents a district that touches the border ,â Grijalva says. âThereâs an environmental argumentâa very strong oneâagainst the wall.â
Protecting that landscape was a focus of Grijalvaâs 13 years on the Pima County Board of Supervisors, which he chaired from 2000 to 2002. He played a lead role in creating that serves as âa national modelâ for sustainable development, according to Supervisor Sharon Bronson, who served with him on that body. Bronson has known Grijalva for over 30 years and considers him a friend, but she says government officials called to explain their controversial policies should tread lightly.
âOne thing for certain about Congressman Grijalva is that he knows BS when he hears it, and he will use all the resources at his command to get the facts that heâs seeking,â she says. âHeâs respectful, but heâs tough. If heâs smiling at you and not saying much, youâd better make sure youâre not bleeding.â
Grijalva might be tough, but he's also a little intimidated, he admits, by the âunbelievable opportunity and responsibilityâ of leading the committee at such an extraordinary political moment. He worries that some conservationists who are appalled by Trumpâs policies expect the situation to change overnight under his chairmanship.
âIt wonât. But we are going about the business of changing the culture in our government that has allowed all of this to happen,â Grijalva says. âThatâs the task ahead.â