Energy

Docs Reveal Extent Of House Democrats’ Crusade Targeting DOI’s Bernhardt

Docs Reveal Extent Of House Democrats’ Crusade Targeting DOI’s Bernhardt

By Terry Tollefsbol, NATIONAL CONSERVATION TRAINING CENTER-PUBLICATIONS AND TRAINING MATERIALS (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service:) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Democrats on the House Natural Resources Committee are preparing to give Chairman Raúl Grijalva of Arizona the ability to subpoena the Department of the Interior after it relocated several employees, E&E News reported Friday.

Democrats on the committee are gearing up to provide Grijalva the power to subpoena as early as Feb. 6, according to an email David Watkins, Democratic staff director for the House Natural Resources Committee, sent to committee members. Democrats on the committee are prodding the DOI to reveal information about the mass relocation.

“The Chair has decided to convene a full committee mark-up Thursday, February 6, at 10am in 1324 to consider a resolution authorizing the Chair to issue subpoenas as part of the Committee’s oversight and legislative work,” Watkins said in the email the Daily Caller News Foundation obtained.

“Chairman Grijalva’s long-desired intention to issue unwarranted subpoenas is nothing more than political grandstanding and a lowly partisan attack against the Trump Administration,” DOI spokeswoman Carol Danko said in a statement to the DCNF. E&E News reported on aspects of the committee’s intention.

“The Department has been more cooperative with the Committee than any in history – turning over an unprecedented number of documents and even extending multiple invitations for personal visits with the Secretary, none of which have been accepted,” Danko said.

She added: “It’s clear the Chairman would rather make headlines than learn the facts.”

Committee members refused to accept tens of thousands of documents related to the DOI’s decision to relocate the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) headquarters to Colorado, according to a Jan. 7 letter from DOI staff director Cole Rojewski to Grijalva.

“You said that your request for information on this particular matter has been largely ‘stonewalled, avoided, and denied,'” Rojewski said in a Jan. 7 letter referring to a memo Grijalva sent that day to DOI Secretary David Bernhardt.

Rojewski added: “Your allegations are simply not true.”

BLM delivered relocation notices to more than 100 Washington, D.C.-based employees in November 2019.

The notices reportedly gave staffers one month to decide whether to move to relocate to Colorado, where roughly 200 agency positions are being dispersed. The agency reportedly gave itself the option to fire those who were not interested in moving.

Congressional Democrats accused the Trump administration of using the relocation gambit as a ruse to dismantle BLM.

“I will continue to work in a bipartisan way on this issue, because the Trump administration should not be deliberately weakening the BLM and upending the lives of the dedicated staff who work there,” New Mexico Sen. Tom Udall, a Democrat, said in a statement to E&E News in November.

The Natural Resources Committee has not responded to the DCNF’s request for comment.

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