One morning this March, Ryan Zinke donned a black cowboy hat, mounted a bay roan horse , and , to his first day at work. After settling into his wood-paneled office, the new Secretary of the Interior met with 19 hook-and-bullet groups, including Ducks Unlimited and the National Wildlife Federation (NWF). A portrait of Teddy Roosevelt .
The artwork was a well-placed nod to Zinke鈥檚 infatuation with America鈥檚 first conservationist president. During his confirmation hearing, the former congressman from Montana called himself an 鈥.鈥 (Even the secretary鈥檚 contains a reference to #TeddyRoosevelt.) Zinke shares his idol鈥檚 environmental zeal to a modest, contemporary degree: He acknowledges climate change, supports the Land and Water Conservation Fund, and opposes the wholesale transfer of federal lands to states.
But wildlife groups aren鈥檛 saying bully to Zinke just yet. On the same day he took office, the secretary shot down a ban on lead ammunition and fishing tackle on all U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service properties. He also announced that the Department of Homeland Security such as jaguars to clear the way for President Trump鈥檚 proposed border wall. And he hinted at by 鈥渘umbers, not habitat,鈥 a discredited approach that could unravel a suite of collaborative plans developed by biologists, ranchers, energy companies, and state and federal officials. 鈥淲e should be looking for ways to work with states to implement those plans,鈥 says Sarah Greenberger, 爆料公社鈥檚 vice president of conservation policy鈥 not torpedo them.
Zinke鈥檚 actions are as concerning as his words. In late March, the secretary that directed the Interior to avoid projects that harm wildlife and habitat, and, if necessary, balance them with new restoration work. He also of the department鈥檚 mitigation, climate change, and energy-development policies, a move that could put Arctic-drilling protections, climate-adaptation strategies, and an array of restoration plans on the chopping block this summer when recommendations are due.
The disturbing news kept coming in April, when a leaked Bureau of Land Management (BLM) 鈥溾 confirmed the agency鈥檚 aim to pivot from conservation to energy development. The memo calls for expediting the permitting process for drilling, coal mining, and pipeline construction; approving border security projects (read: the wall); and possibly defanging the Endangered Species Act. Additionally, President Trump ordered the secretary to investigate 27 national monument designations, a direct threat to the Antiquities Act, which was passed by none other than Roosevelt himself.
Granted, the news hasn鈥檛 all been grim: In April, the Migratory Bird Conservation Commission, chaired by Zinke, to restore more than 100,000 acres of habitat in 14 states. Collin O鈥橫ara, president and CEO of NWF, hopes the secretary can be persuaded to preserve more land for sensitive species. 鈥淚f he makes some upfront investments now, he can avoid regulatory actions later,鈥 O鈥橫ara says. 鈥淚n a lot of ways, that鈥檚 a conservative solution.鈥
But even if Zinke wants to help, he鈥檒l be hamstrung by his agency鈥檚 budget. The Interior is already strapped for cash鈥攖he National Park Service alone faces 鈥攜et President Trump has proposed to by 11 percent, or about $1.4 billion. After his confirmation hearing, the secretary vowed to fight any cuts, adding, 鈥淚 think I鈥檓 going to win.鈥 The fact that he鈥檚 still losing, says Whit Fosburgh, president and CEO of the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership, suggests that Zinke may not be in Trump鈥檚 inner circle鈥攚hich could make it harder to secure conservation dollars.
Fosburgh, like most wildlife advocates, is withholding judgment on whether the fanboy can live up to his rhetoric. On the surface, Zinke shares plenty with his toothy idol, including a military background, a fondness for hunting, and a penchant for cantering through the capital on horseback. But for now, that鈥檚 where the comparison ends. 鈥淵ou want to be the next great conservationist?鈥 asks Fosburgh. 鈥淥K, what positive steps are you going to take for the long-term management of our lands?鈥 Unlike Roosevelt, Zinke has neither spoken softly, nor carried a big stick鈥攁t least, not on behalf of nature.