Background , managed by the Battle Mountain BLM Field Office , managed by the Boise District of the BLM The BLM's roots go back to the
Land Ordinance of 1785 and the
Northwest Ordinance of 1787. These laws provided for the survey and settlement of the lands that the original
Thirteen Colonies ceded to the federal government after the
American Revolution. After the war, the
Treaty of Paris of 1783, signed by the United States, the
UK,
France, and
Spain, ceded territory to the United States. In the 1780s, other states relinquished their own claims to land in modern-day
Ohio. and land was sold as a source of income for the government. In 1812, Congress established the
United States General Land Office as part of the
Department of the Treasury to oversee the disposition of these federal lands. By the early 1800s, promised bounty land claims were finally fulfilled. Several different types of patents existed. These include cash entry, credit, homestead, Indian, military warrants, mineral certificates, private land claims, railroads, state selections, swamps, town sites, and town lots. The
Mineral Leasing Act of 1920 allowed leasing, exploration, and production of selected commodities, such as
coal,
oil,
gas, and
sodium to take place on public lands. The
Taylor Grazing Act of 1934 established the
United States Grazing Service to
manage the public rangelands by establishment of advisory boards that set grazing fees. The
Oregon and California Revested Lands Sustained Yield Management Act of 1937, commonly referred as the O&C Act, required sustained
yield management of the timberlands in western Oregon.
Establishment and early history In 1946, the
Grazing Service was merged with the
United States General Land Office to form the Bureau of Land Management within the
Department of the Interior. In the end, the Bureau of Land Management became less focused on land disposal and more focused on the long term management and preservation of the land. As a matter of course, the BLM's emphasis fell on activities in the western states as most of the mining, land sales, and federally owned areas are located west of the Mississippi. BLM personnel on the ground have typically been oriented toward local interests, while bureau management in Washington are led by presidential guidance. By means of the
Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976, Congress created a more unified bureau mission and recognized the value of the remaining public lands by declaring that these lands would remain in public ownership. Since the
Reagan administration in the 1980s, Republicans have often given priority to local control and to grazing, mining and petroleum production, while Democrats have more often emphasized environmental concerns even when granting mining and drilling leases. In September 1996, then President
Bill Clinton used his authority under the
Antiquities Act to establish the
Grand Staircase–Escalante National Monument in southern Utah, the first of now 20 national monuments established on BLM lands and managed by the agency.
First Trump administration Under the Trump administration, the BLM offered millions of acres of available federal lands for 10-year leases for commercial development, potentially in oil and gas and mining, with the stated goal of "promoting American energy security". According to a June 18, 2018 article in
The Atlantic, under the tenure of then-
United States Secretary of the Interior,
Ryan Zinke "practically gave away hundreds of thousands of acres of open land across the West, leasing it to energy companies for pennies on the dollar."
The Salt Lake Tribune reported that in March 2019, the price per acre for leases near the
Golden Spike National Historical Park, in Utah were "$1.50 an acre for the next two years". By September 11, 2018, the Department of Interior was offering 2.9 million acres to be leased to commercial operations including drilling for oil and gas and mining in New Mexico, Colorado, Arizona, and other states where public land is not protected by a national park or monument designation. The BLM's May 30, 2019 statement proposed an additional 183,668 acres on "lands managed by the Canyon Country, Color Country, Green River, and West Desert districts" that would be listed for the quarterly oil and gas lease sale on September 10, 2019. Also in August 2020, the BLM headquarters was relocated to
Grand Junction, Colorado, by an order signed by Interior Secretary
David Bernhardt. The relocation was praised by Republican Western politicians but criticized by Democrats as a move to weaken the agency through the loss of experienced staffers, who opted to stay in Washington, D.C. Some ranchers were concerned about the isolation of Grand Junction compared to other Western cities, having limited flights and road access. After the announcement, 87% of D.C.-based employees left, prompting former lead career BLM official Steve Ellis to state "the bureau lost a tremendous amount of expertise...[of] very seasoned people."
Biden administration On September 17, 2021, Secretary
Deb Haaland announced that the headquarters would be moved back to Washington, D.C. Under the Biden administration, the BLM was working on a pilot project called "outcomes-based grazing", to see if cattle grazing can help achieve conservation, agency director
Tracy Stone-Manning said in an interview published in April 2022. In June 2022, the BLM finalized two acquisitions in Colorado and Wyoming, acquiring over 40,000 acres of previously inaccessible land. The acquisition in Wyoming for 35,670 acres is the agency's largest ever purchase in the state. In August 2022, the
Inflation Reduction Act became effective. In 2024 the Department of the Interior begun to advance a new rule according to which the Bureau of Land Management can distribute restoration leases and mitigation leases exactly in the same way as it distributes new leases for oil and gas drilling. The designed land will be used for nature conservation including use of indigenous knowledge. This policy was repealed in September 2025 under the second Trump administration.
Second Trump administration In February 2025, three weeks after the beginning of his
second presidency, president Trump nominated
Kathleen Sgamma, a petroleum industry lobbyist who contributed to
Project 2025, to lead the BLM. Sgamma had previously served as president of the
Western Energy Alliance, an association of independent oil and natural gas companies with interests on public lands. Sgamma withdrew her nomination on April 10, just as her confirmation hearing was about to begin. ==Programs==