Shitstain's Public Lands Legacy- Protection Stripped From 35 Million Acres, Extended To 37,000 Acres
EDIT
Environmentalists, outdoor sporting groups and even a great-grandson of Roosevelt himself have repeatedly blasted the Trump administration for invoking and comparing itself to the 26th president. And a new analysis from the Center for American Progress shows just how wildly off the mark the administration is. By the numbers, Trump is the most anti-nature president in U.S. history, the left-leaning think tank found. If the Trump administration aspires to build upon Teddy Roosevelts conservation legacy, they may want to consider stopping their attacks on the very system of public lands that Roosevelt helped build, said Jenny Rowland-Shea, CAPs senior public lands policy analyst and a co-author of the report. The numbers reveal an administration that has handed extractive industries access to public lands at a scope and scale weve never seen before.
Trump is the only president to strip protections from more acres of public land than hes protected, according to the analysis. The administration has weakened or is in the process of rolling back protections for nearly 35 million acres of federal land, an area roughly the size of Florida.
That includes slashing protections for 10 million acres of greater sage grouse habitat in seven Western states to allow energy and mineral development; a directive to greenlight logging on more than 9 million acres of Alaskas Tongass National Forest, the planets largest remaining intact temperate rainforest; and carving more than 2 million acres from a pair of protected national monuments in Utah ― Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante ― the largest rollback of national monuments in U.S. history. The 35 million acre figure does not include the more than 24 million acres of public lands that the Trump administration has offered at auction to oil and gas drillers or its controversial offshore drilling plan that could open up nearly all U.S. waters ― some 1.5 billion acres ― to fossil fuel development.
Meanwhile, the Trump administration has protected via executive action less than 37,000 acres, CAP found. That includes the administrations extension of a mining ban on 30,000 acres in Zinkes home state of Montana, in an area just north of Yellowstone National Park. By comparison, Roosevelt protected over 230 million acres of federal land by establishing five national parks, 18 national monuments and dozens of national forests and wildlife refuges.
EDIT
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/analysis-trump-public-lands-rollbacks_n_5ec59af1c5b6df8b159bf287