Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

flamingdem

(40,647 posts)
1. The Senate's Budget Bill: A Massive Giveaway of Alaska's Wildest Places
Wed Jun 18, 2025, 10:16 AM
Jun 18
https://alaskawild.org/blog/the-senates-budget-bill-a-massive-giveaway-of-alaskas-wildest-places/

What’s Actually in the Bill?

A massive public land sell-off.
The bill requires the federal government to sell off between 2.1 and 3.3 million acres of public lands across 11 states — including Alaska — by 2030. While it claims to sell this land for housing, there are no affordability requirements or long term restrictions for land use. No conservation protections. No limits on what gets built. Just a land rush to privatize our shared places where people hunt, fish, hike, and find peace.

Forced oil and gas leasing on a mind-boggling scale.

Arctic National Wildlife Refuge: The bill mandates four lease sales over the next decade, locking in Trump’s weak 2020 leasing plan and gutting protections for wildlife, the Coastal Plain, and subsistence resources.

Western Arctic: Five lease sales required over 10 years, with the first within 12 months. It would also wipe out Biden’s 2024 Special Area protections — protections that thousands of Alaskans and Americans are still fighting for right now.

Cook Inlet Offshore: Six oil and gas lease sales, each offering at least 1 million acres, relying on outdated plans that shortchange environmental review.

A rubber stamp for destructive mining.
The bill mandates approval of the Ambler Road — a 211-mile industrial corridor slicing through critical wildlife habitat near the Brooks Range. The Biden administration rejected the project for good reason: it threatens caribou, salmon, and the health of local communities. This bill would force it through in 90 days, with no meaningful review and no real chance for the public to weigh in.
What This Means for Alaska — And All of Us

Let’s not sugarcoat it. If this passes, it’s a major setback for huge swaths of Alaska’s wild lands.

Public lands lost — forever. Once these places are sold off, they’re gone. No second chances. No undo button.

Wildlife habitat destroyed. Caribou calving grounds. Migratory bird sanctuaries. Salmon streams. All put at risk to appease industry and shareholder profits.

Climate disaster accelerated. The Arctic is warming four times faster than the rest of the planet. Mandating new oil and gas drilling here? It’s like tossing gasoline on a fire and pretending it’s responsible governance.

A distraction from the real agenda. The forced land sales, the lease mandates, the mining greenlights — they’re not about energy security or housing. They’re about creating political cover for giant tax breaks for billionaires. Congress is trying to trade away our future to pay for giveaways to the ultra-wealthy.
This Is a Generational Decision

We have a choice: Fight for our shared public lands, for climate action, and for future generations. Or let them be sold off for the short-term profits of a few.

In the coming weeks, this bill may go to a Senate vote before going back to the House for one last vote. And all bets are off if it lands on Trump’s desk.

Take action now and tell your lawmakers: Public lands are not for sale. Not now. Not ever.

The Arctic isn’t for sale. The Western Arctic isn’t for sale. Cook Inlet isn’t for sale. And our public lands sure as hell aren’t for sale to fund billionaire tax breaks.

Recommendations

1 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Latest Discussions»General Discussion»URGENT: Congress (GOP) is...»Reply #1