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Bureau of Land Management Finally Gets Its Own Private Foundation – Mother Jones
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Bureau of Land Management Finally Gets Its Own Private Foundation – Mother Jones

Bureau of Land Management Finally Gets Its Own Private Foundation – Mother Jones

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Former Montana Governor Steve Bullock and Tracy Stone-Manning, Director of BLM in 2012Matt Gouras/AP

This story was first published by High Country News and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

Federal land management agencies often rely on partner foundations for a financial boost. The National Park Service and US Forest Service have associated foundations that raise private funds to address issues such as land restoration and surging visits outside of funding constraints.

For several decades, the agency that oversees the most land in the country hasn’t had this kind of support. The Bureau of Land Management with its 245 million acres of managed land is now part of the club.

In 2017, Congress approved the idea of a foundation to support the BLM. Five years later, it’s coming to fruition. This month, the Department of Interior that the nonprofit Foundation for America’s Public Lands is finally forming. Four board members were named in mid-January, boasting big names like former Montana Governor Steve Bullock (also previously BLM Director Tracy Stone-Manning’s boss) and former BLM Director Neil Kornze.

The board also includes Maite Arce (founder of the Hispanic Access Foundation) and Stacy Leeds (a law professor at Arizona State University who is a Cherokee Nation member). Interior Secretary Deb Haaland will appoint five additional members. $3 million in seed money from Congress is available to help with staff hiring.

“Just like other federal land management agencies, the BLM budget is always tight, and the work at hand is enormous,” Arce said. “They could really use the help, and this is a great way to address that.” A Recent analysis by Montana-based think tank Headwaters Economics found that while the visitation to BLM lands increased by 8.5 million people between 2010 and 2018, the budget for recreation decreased by $14 million during the same period . In fiscal year 2020 the BLM had more $4 billion. Deferred maintenance costs nationwide.

Arce said specifics about how the foundation‘s model, as well as what the budget and fundraising goals will look like, are yet to be determined. An initial board member meeting in March will kick planning into high gear, but Arce already has some things she’d like to see. “My interest is around access and equity, from the startup process, the mission of the BLM, the work at hand, even the fundraising,” she said. “Making sure that all communities are represented, considered, and included as this work is started.”

Foundations for other federal land management agencies are already well established—and the BLM’s own nonprofit might take some cues from its older, more established sibling organizations. The National Forest Foundation was created by Congress in 1983. The foundation is a private partnership with contractors and nonprofits that primarily assists the Forest Service. Paid $19.4 million in 2021 to accomplish restoration work on national forests, according to Mary Mitsos, the foundation’s president. That money went nationwide to planting over 7 million trees and restoring 3,238 acres of wetland restoration, as well as to projects in specific areas—like improving trails and campgrounds in Washington’s Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest, and reducing wildfire and flood risk in national forests in northern Arizona.

The National Park Foundation, 55 years old is still a strong advocate for national parks. While foundation donations fluctuate, Chief Operating Officer Dieter Fenkart-Froeschl said the foundation raised an average of $68 million annually to support The National Park Service in the last three fiscal years. (The foundation raises $106million annually. That money is doled out in two ways: grants for things like a park’s restoration project or programs that get kids outside, and support for the agency as a whole outside of its operating budget. “We allow the Park Service to take that extra leap that they otherwise wouldn’t be able to do,” Fenkart-Froeschl said.

Fenkart-Froeschl sees a successful BLM foundation influencing future big-picture plans for strapped federal agencies. “That’s something I’d like to see other organizations like ours do,” he said. “We’re becoming a thought leader for our colleagues at the Park Service. They do an amazing job managing the day to day, but oftentimes, they don’t have the resources or time to really think about what’s ahead.” That includes shifting from purely philanthropy to also amplifying key messages for the matching federal agency—like the Park Service’s “Find Your Park” and “Recreate Responsibly” campaigns.

What other advice does Fenkart-Froeschl have for the BLM’s nascent foundation leaders? They should know their goals and work in sync with the BLM. Find nonprofit partners and remain nonpartisan. “I think that is one of the most important things that we draw upon,” he said. “We’ve worked with every administration since 1967 … that really makes us stronger as an organization in the long run.”

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