Oil and Gas Parcels Are Still On the Table
NORTH FORK VALLEY – In a decision that surprised many, the Bureau of Land Management announced on Wednesday, Feb. 6, that it was removing all 20 controversial North Fork Valley parcels from an oil and gas lease sale scheduled to take place Feb. 14.
The decision is technically a “deferral,” said Citizens for a Healthy Community Director Jim Ramey, in a release. “The nominated parcels remain on the table and can be offered again for sale at any time by the BLM.”
But the news comes as relief to valley residents, who had argued vociferously, in the streets, on lobbying trips to Washington, D.C., and, in a widely read article by Jack Healy in last week’s Sunday New York Times, that some places really should be spared altogether from the industrialization of oil and gas development. And the North Fork, with its small-town character, rural way of life, scenic beauty and organic farming and ranching, is one of those places.
In its own press release Wednesday morning, the BLM said the 20 parcels (comprising 20,555 acres on the outskirts of the towns of Paonia, Hotchkiss and Crawford) were being deferred from the quarterly lease sale, which nevertheless goes forward, in Denver next week, with the leasing of 151 parcels totaling more than 88,000 acres across Colorado.
BLM State Director Helen Hankin, who visited the three North Fork towns for meetings two weeks ago, wrote: “We’ve listened to concerns raised in numerous comments and public meetings and we are responding by deferring the North Fork parcels at this time. We are addressing the deferred parcels through continued dialogue with the local community and with ongoing planning efforts in the Uncompahgre Field Office.”
The Uncompahgre Field Office is currently revising it nearly 30-year-old Resource Management Plan.
pshelton@watchnewspapers.com
BLM Defers North Fork Leases, For Now
Comments
(0)
photos
RATS’ NEST – A rack of demo bikes at last year’s Ridgway Area Trails (RAT) Festival in Hartwell Park. This year’s 3rd annual will again feature trail building and skills clinics, along with a new Friday beer-and-shorts film night at the Sherbino Theater. (Courtesy photo)
VOLUNTEER Linda Granzow worked twine through spent round casings at the Welcome Home Montrose Warrior Resource Center last week. (Photo by William Woody)
WARRIOR WIND CHIMES – Welcome Home Montrose staff Emily Smith painted ceramic part of wind chimes at the Welcome Home Montrose Warrior Resource Center last week. (Photo by William Woody)
BACK HOME IN TELLURIDE – members of Telluride’s Volunteer Fire Department helped move the Galloping Goose No. 4 back to its home next to the San Miguel County Courthouse on May 16. The railbus spent the last four years in Ridgway while it was refurbished. (Photo by Brett Schreckengost)

ROBERT JUSTIS (Courtesy photo)
