The Wild Line

The Wild Line: Big stories shaping the future of our wild places

Congress Targets Land Management Plans, EPA Silences Critics

Congress returned from recess this week and wasted no time taking aim at public lands, passing a slate of resolutions that roll back years of planning in Alaska, Montana, and North Dakota. We spoke with Alaskans on the ground about what these changes mean for their communities. Meanwhile, lawmakers advanced the Ambler Road project and a series of controversial mining and wildlife bills, even as a hearing opened on reauthorizing the Great American Outdoors Act. Outside of Congress, the EPA moved to fire dozens of employees, wildfire crews raised alarms after arrests on the fireline, and new disputes over sage grouse, water rights, and climate science shaped the week. Plus, the USDA is expanding an unusual tool in the wolf conflict toolbox: drones playing human voices and rock music.

Refuge Expansion Stopped, Act Now to Save the Roadless Rule!

This week on The Wild Line, we dig into big developments across America’s public lands. USDA has quietly extended the comment period on its controversial Forest Service reorganization plan, while also moving to roll back the Roadless Rule, threatening protections for 45 million acres. We look at the first-ever retreat from a wildlife refuge expansion in Texas and a court ruling that weakens protections for the lesser prairie chicken, plus a Montana summit where Ryan Zinke and conservative groups pressed for more state control of federal lands. We also bring you updates from Alaska’s oil and gas meeting, new research on wildfire severity in California, and Yosemite rangers’ vote to unionize after steep workforce cuts. And we’ll tell you what’s ahead as The Wild Idea podcast returns next week with a Labor Day bonus episode and a conversation with Chris Hill of the Conservation Lands Foundation.

Reprieve for Hawaii Marine Monument, Red Wolves Take Step Toward Recovery

This week on The Wild Line, we’re celebrating some rare and welcome good news for the red wolf, with pups on the ground in North Carolina and a population that’s finally on the rise. We also have updates on a court order halting construction in the Everglades, a legal win for one of the Pacific’s most important marine monuments, and a new tool that lets you see which public lands the BLM has marked for possible sale. Plus, we check in on efforts to defend California’s Chuckwalla National Monument and hear Anders’ take on a troubling federal move in DC. We’re taking a short summer recess next week, but not before teeing up Tuesday’s Wild Idea Podcast conversation about a big win for the Okefenokee Swamp.

Montana Rivers Protected, Louisiana Wetlands Abandoned, LWCF Threatened

Today we report on the rollback of protections in Alaska’s North Slope, revival of a mining project near the Boundary Waters, and threats to the Land and Water Conservation Fund. We offer some good news with proposed Wild and Scenic River designations in Montana, and some bad news with Louisiana’s cancellation of a landmark coastal restoration project, plus public comments open on a controversial Forest Service reorganization plan.

Senators Slam USDA Reorg, New Parks Deep in the Heart of Texas

Today on The Wild Line, we cover major shakeups across the agencies that manage public lands and wildlife—layoffs at the Interior Department, a controversial reorganization plan at USDA, and deep cuts to wilderness staffing within the Forest Service. We break down a proposed overhaul to NEPA, new appointments moving through the Senate, and ongoing negotiations over NOAA and marine mammal funding. Plus: a major park funding win in Texas, the loss of sage grouse in North Dakota, and a new conservation bill for Illinois’s Shawnee National Forest.

Oil Train Rolls in Utah, Merkley Asks for Wildfire Funds, Trump Targets Park History

Join us for today’s full roundup of what’s happening across all three branches of government, plus a reminder that history is written not just in laws, but in landscapes. We dive into the latest BLM approvals, two new Trump-era executive orders, a small act you can take to help save our National Park signs, and a whole lot more.

Congress Wraps Up Reconciliation, Trump Eyes the Everglades, USDA Considers Nuking NEPA

Bill and Anders cover the end of the budget reconciliation process, where a proposed public land sell-off was defeated, but many major setbacks for public lands remained. The Forest Service moved to weaken its rules for following the National Environmental Policy Act, and in Montana, a new Good Neighbor Authority agreement handed management of 200,000 acres of federal land over to the state. We also track a new lawsuit challenging the development of the so-called “Alligator Alcatraz” in the Florida Everglades.

Okeefenokee Swamp Saved, Trump Targets Roadless Rule, Lee’s Land Sale Hits a Snag

Bill and Anders break down a big week for public lands. The Okefenokee Swamp is safe from mining, Arkansas banned large hog farms in the Buffalo River Watershed, and Senator Mike Lee’s latest land sell-off push has hit a snag. Major threats remain; the Trump administration moves to repeal the Roadless Rule, putting 58 million acres at risk. Plus, Senate updates, Forest Service rulemaking, and a tribute to Montana wilderness champion Pat Williams.

Wildfire, Broken Promises and Reconciliation

Today we’re tracking three major stories shaping the future of public lands and the communities that depend on them, including a new executive order aimed at “commonsense” wildfire prevention and response.

Find us on these podcast players and more:

Welome to The Wild Line, a new weekly series from The Wild Idea podcast. This show is for all of you who’ve asked to stay informed about what’s happening with our public lands, from Washington, D.C. to your own backyard. Each Friday, we’ll bring you the big stories shaping the future of our wild places, with sharp commentary, context, and some fire.

The Wild Line weekly podcast updates