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Trump's Government Reorganization Plan Has Big Impacts In The West

Montana's Upper Missouri River Breaks, from the BLM's Facebook page. https://goo.gl/mRfcFV
U.S. Bureau of Land Management, https://goo.gl/mRfcFV
Montana's Upper Missouri River Breaks, from the BLM's Facebook page. https://goo.gl/mRfcFV
Montana's Upper Missouri River Breaks, from the BLM's Facebook page. https://goo.gl/mRfcFV
Credit U.S. Bureau of Land Management, https://goo.gl/mRfcFV
Montana's Upper Missouri River Breaks, from the BLM's Facebook page. https://goo.gl/mRfcFV

Trump's Government Reorganization Plan Has Big Impacts In The West

U.S. Senate committees will hold hearings this week on the Trump administration's plan to reorganize the government. It includes a department that manages millions of acres of public lands in our region.

Every administration tries to make the government leaner and meaner, but Trump’s plan to do so is one of biggest and boldest in modern history.

“These are very sweeping changes,” said Eric Austin, political scientist at Montana State University. 

Trump’s plan would move the food stamps program from the U.S. Department of Agriculture to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.  It would also merge the U.S. Departments of Education and Labor and it would radically change the U.S. Interior Department.

Austin said employees there could get shuffled around the country and key regulatory positions could lose pay and power.

“And that’ll potentially have a big impact as agencies like the [Bureau of Land Management] are involved in mineral extraction and timber extraction and other use questions," he said.

However, Austin said previous administrations haven’t been too successful in fully implementing their plans because they need Congress to approve parts of it first.

This story was produced by the Mountain West News Bureau, a collaboration between Wyoming Public Media, Boise State Public Radio in Idaho, Yellowstone Public Radio in Montana, KUER in Salt Lake City and KRCC and KUNC in Colorado.

Copyright 2021 Yellowstone Public Radio. To see more, visit Yellowstone Public Radio.

Nate is UM School of Journalism reporter. He reads the news on Montana Public Radio three nights a week.
Nate Hegyi
Nate Hegyi is a reporter with the Mountain West News Bureau based at Yellowstone Public Radio. He earned an M.A. in Environmental Science and Natural Resource Journalism in 2016 and interned at NPR’s Morning Edition in 2014. In a prior life, he toured around the country in a band, lived in Texas for a spell, and once tried unsuccessfully to fly fish. You can reach Nate at nate@ypradio.org.
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