Conservation groups’ analysis finds that the Bureau of Land Management’s finalized Rock Springs Resource Management Plan — which has been criticized as out of step with the state’s needs and priorities — incorporates 85% of the recommendations made by Wyoming’s governor-appointed task force.
The analysis “shows that the agency respects the collaborative process that Gov. [Mark] Gordon led and the consensus-based outcomes that the task force produced,” Wyoming Outdoor Council Program Director Alec Underwood said. “It’s apparent that the agency took seriously [the task force’s] substantive recommendations for management direction,” added Underwood, who was a task force member.
The finding, which the Wyoming Outdoor Council and the Wilderness Society released this week, contrasts criticism that the finalized plan is far from what the people of Wyoming want. It also comes after a state lawmaker called the task force process “flawed.”
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It’s the latest development in years of heated debate over how to manage some 3.6 million acres of public lands in southwestern Wyoming.
The enormous acreage in question, which the BLM Rock Springs Field Office oversees, encompasses everything from sand dunes to sagebrush ecosystems, badlands and wrinkled mountains. It’s home to the Northern Red Desert’s petroglyphs, pathways like the Continental Divide Trail and major wildlife corridors. People utilize it for economic activities like trona mining and livestock grazing and for recreation like OHV riding and camping.
A recap
The BLM in August released its finalized environmental impact statement outlining its proposed Resource Management Plan for the Rock Springs Field Office. The plan has not been updated since 1997.
This came a year after the agency released the draft plan, drawing intense backlash. The conservation-heavy “preferred alternative” released in 2023 sparked outrage over stricter limits on energy extraction and expansions of protected areas. Critics lambasted the plan as an instrument that would kill the area’s economy and close much-loved areas for outdoor recreation. Anger and misinformation — including erroneous information accidentally disseminated by the BLM itself — characterized the packed meetings that ensued. Some 35,000 comments poured in during the extended public comment period.
BLM Rock Springs Field Officer Supervisor Kimberlee Foster listens as a man expresses his disdain for the agency’s preferred alternative resource management draft plan during a meeting in Rock Springs Sept. 27, 2023. “I think you better listen to the people,” he said. (Katie Klingsporn/WyoFile)
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Amid that extended comment period, Gordon announced the formation of a gubernatorial task force, tapping the University of Wyoming’s Ruckelshaus Institute to facilitate stakeholder conversations. The intent was to hammer out recommendations supported by all the interests represented — everything from trona mining to oil and gas, conservation and hunting.
Despite representing disparate interests, the 11 members reached consensus on more than 100 recommendations for the BLM.
The agency carefully considered those recommendations as it drafted its finalized plan, BLM Wyoming Associate State Director Kris Kirby told a legislative committee in September. During that meeting, Sen. John Kolb (R-Rock Springs), who sat on the task force, said that while some good recommendations came out of the group, the process gave outsized weight to certain viewpoints.
“I think it was a flawed system that worked on 100% buy-in,” Kolb said.
Because of one dissenting member, Kolb said, the task force process was “shanghaied by the environmental groups,” resulting in recommendations that didn’t truly represent the majority.
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Steve Martin, past president of Bowhunters of Wyoming, attends a meeting about the BLM’s Rock Springs Area Resource Management Plan Revision in Rock Springs on Nov. 17. (Angus M. Thuermer Jr./WyoFile)
When the task force released its recommendations, Gordon touted them as a vehicle for how Wyoming knowledge can inform a better Rock Springs land management plan.
“It was critical we amplified the public’s involvement in this important BLM planning document, and shared with BLM how Wyoming, through collaboration, creates durable and quality land management policy,” he said.
Gordon also expressed displeasure with the finalized plan, which “does not meet Wyoming’s expectations of durable, multiple use of public lands,” he said following its release. “A cursory review makes it clear where the BLM considered local and cooperative input, and where the agency chose to force through national agendas.”
Not so fast
Wyoming Outdoor Council and The Wilderness Society manually compared each task force recommendation with the correlated management action in the Proposed RMP to produce their favorable review.
In a parallel effort, the public lands advocacy group Center for Western Priorities analyzed how well the BLM incorporated all public comments — not just Wyoming’s — into its final plan. The organization made a public records request for all 35,000+ comments, according to a press release, which allowed it to analyze the proportion in favor of or opposed to conservation of wild lands, wildlife habitats and important cultural areas. Using a random sample of 5,000 comments, the CWP found that 92% were in support of conservation measures.
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The Sand Dunes Wilderness Study Area encompasses 27,000 acres of BLM lands in the Red Desert. There, people can hike, bird watch and hunt. (Bob Wick/BLM/FlickrCC)
“It’s a really robust data set, and a very robust sample size to give you an idea of just how much support there was,” Aaron Weiss, deputy director of Center for Western Priorities, said. “And I think it gets to the point that as controversial as some folks in Wyoming wanted to paint this plan — that it was incredibly divisive — when you look at the actual numbers, it was not at all divisive.”
Weiss said the sheer number of comments illustrates sky-high interest among Western residents and called the proportion in support “stunning.”
“I can’t think of any major public policy issue that comes across the finish line with 92% public support,” he said. “That is really a stunning number, and I think a testament to how much listening BLM did, both at the agency level and especially at the field office level, to work in public feedback and comments into this proposed management plan.”
A 30-day protest period on the finalized plan ended in September, though a governor’s consistency review is still ongoing. These are among the final steps before the RMP becomes final.
This article was originally published by WyoFile and is republished here with permission. WyoFile is an independent nonprofit news organization focused on Wyoming people, places and policy.
The Wyoming Legislature is tasked with approving a balanced biennial budget for the State during the next month. Sheridan Media’s Ron Richter has the details.
Governor Gordon Delivers State of the State Address
In his 2026 State of the State to the 68th Wyoming Legislature Monday morning, Governor Mark Gordon called on lawmakers to focus on the essential responsibilities of government, drawing on the lessons of the nation’s 250-year history to guide decisions for Wyoming’s future.
Governor Mark Gordon
Speaking in the House Chamber to the Joint Session, the Governor framed his recommended 2027–2028 biennial budget as a practical, conservative plan built on the fundamentals that keep families strong, communities stable, and opportunity within reach. Gordon urged legislators to prioritize savings, continued development of Wyoming’s natural resources, support for agriculture, rural health care, education, economic development and an efficient state workforce.
Governor Mark Gordon
The Governor also stressed the importance of continuing long term investment in Wyoming’s energy and mineral industries, expansion of agricultural markets as part of his overall support of statewide economic development efforts, strengthened water and natural resource protections, and key improvements to rural health care.
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We’ll have more of the Governor’s State of the State address in future stories.
Wyoming lawmakers are considering a bill that would allow the Wyoming Department of Transportation (WYDOT) to enact tolls on roadways throughout the state.
On February 5, 2026, Wyoming Senator Ogden Driskill introduced the bill SF0073.
The bill would give WYDOT the authority to create a highway tolling program, and it also outlines the process for implementing tolls. The bill does not require WYDOT to implement tolls.
The text of the bill does not specify which roads WYDOT could choose for tolling, but Driskill pointed to I-80 as a possible target for tolls in a social media post following a double fatality crash that backed up traffic along the interstate on February 8, 2026.
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“A picture says it all— Wyoming needs to deal with I-80 – incredibly dangerous stretch of road (400 plus miles) that drains nearly 1/2 of our state road budget—- to support 7,000 plus semis a day, primarily only stopping for fuel in Wyoming. I have introduced a bill that allows-NOT REQUIRES- tolling on I-80. Done correctly it could have little or no impact on Wyoming drivers while having interstate truckers pay their fair share of damage and costs,” Driskill said.
If the bill were to pass, it isn’t clear whether Wyoming would be permitted to place a toll on I-80 since most interstate are toll-free, with some “grandfathered” exceptions.
Public Input Sessions Scheduled for Pinedale and Jackson RegionsWorkshop Details and Locations
The Wyoming Game and Fish Department will hold public workshops on the elk feedground management action plan process for the Pinedale and Jackson elk herd units. The events offer process updates and an opportunity for the public to engage in conversation and share input.The Pinedale workshop is set for February twenty-sixth at six p-m at the Pinedale Regional Game and Fish Office on four hundred thirty-two East Mill Street. The Jackson workshop will take place on February twenty-eighth at one p-m in the Teton County Library Ordway Auditorium on one hundred twenty-five Virginian Lane.For related wildlife management discussions, check out this story on Wyoming Game and Fish to Hold Public Meetings on Proposed Regulation Changes.
Background on Feedground Management Plans
Following the Wyoming Game and Fish Commission’s approval of the Wyoming Elk Feedgrounds Management Plan in March twenty-twenty-four, the Jackson and Pinedale regions began developing specific feedground management action plans tailored to individual elk herds and their respective feedgrounds. There are three elk herd units in each region, which include twenty-one department-operated feedgrounds.In the Pinedale Region, the feedground management action plan development process started with the Pinedale elk herd unit. This herd unit encompasses elk hunt areas ninety-seven and ninety-eight and includes the Fall, Scab and Muddy Creek feedgrounds.The Jackson Region began its process with the Jackson elk herd unit, which encompasses elk hunt areas seventy through seventy-two, seventy-five and seventy-seven through eighty-three. This herd unit includes the department-operated Fish Creek and Patrol Cabin feedgrounds, as well as the federally-managed National Elk Refuge.Read more about elk management in this article on Wyoming Game and Fish to Discuss Jackson Lake Fishing Regulations, which touches on regional wildlife planning.
Goals and Strategies of the Action Plans
The feedground management action plans are intended to evaluate each strategy outlined in the Feedgrounds Management Plan and determine how it can be uniquely and appropriately applied at the herd unit and feedground levels, while adhering to the Commission-supported goals and sideboards established in the plan.Goals include promoting elk herd health by limiting disease transmission while providing supplemental feed, and reducing reliance of elk on supplemental feed while adhering to the sideboards.Sideboards encompass adhering to standard department process for elk herd unit population objective review with public process and Commission approval for any proposed changes; prioritizing hunting opportunities as the primary tool to manage elk populations toward the Commission-approved herd unit objectives; minimizing elk damage to private property, disease transmission to livestock, and negative economic impacts to livestock producers; and minimizing competition with other wintering wildlife species.
The Jackson Hole Radio staff has been covering news in Teton County, WY since 1963. Our editorial team is committed to providing readers, and listeners, with first-hand accounts of everyday life in one of America’s most beautiful towns.